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Structural organization of the human gastrointestinal glutathione peroxidase (GPX2) promoter and 3'-nontranscribed region: transcriptional response to exogenous redox agents
Authors:Kelner M J  Bagnell R D  Montoya M A  Lanham K A
Affiliation:

Laboratoire Ecologie Moléculaire and Faculté Sciences et Techniques Côte-Basque, Université de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour, BP 1155, 64 013 Pau, France

Abstract:We describe a new family of repetitive elements, named Mimo, from the mosquito Culex pipiens. Structural characteristics of these elements fit well with those of miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements (MITEs), which are ubiquitous and highly abundant in plant genomes. The occurrence of Mimo in C. pipiens provides new evidence that MITEs are not restricted to plant genomes, but may be widespread in arthropods as well. The copy number of Mimo elements in C. pipiens (1000 copies in a 540 Mb genome) supports the hypothesis that there is a positive correlation between genome size and the magnitude of MITE proliferation. In contrast to most MITE families described so far, members of the Mimo family share a high sequence conservation, which may reflect a recent amplification history in this species. In addition, we found that Mimo elements are a frequent nest for other MITE-like elements, suggesting that multiple and successive MITE transposition events have occurred very recently in the C. pipiens genome. Despite evidence for recent mobility of these MITEs, no element has been found to encode a protein; therefore, we do not know how they have transposed and have spread in the genome. However, some sequence similarities in terminal inverted-repeats suggest a possible filiation of some of these mosquito MITEs with pogo-like DNA transposons.
Keywords:Genome evolution   MITEs   pogo   Repetitive DNA   Transposons
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