The Arabidopsis transposable element Tag1 is widely distributed among Arabidopsis ecotypes |
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Authors: | M. J. Frank D. Preuss A. Mack T. C. Kuhlmann N. M. Crawford |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biology, University of California at San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, CA 92093-0116, USA Fax: +1-619-534-1637; e-mail: ncrawford@ucsd.edu, US;(2) Department of Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA, US |
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Abstract: | Tag1 is an autonomous transposable element (3.3 kb in length) first identified as an insertion in the CHL1 (NRT1) gene of Arabidopsis thaliana. Tag1 has been found in the Landsberg erecta ecotype of A. thaliana but not in Columbia or WS. In this paper, 41 additional ecotypes were examined for the presence of Tag1. Using an internal Tag1 fragment as probe, we found that DNA from 19 of the 41 ecotypes strongly hybridized to Tag1. Almost all of the Tag1-containing ecotypes had only one or two copies of Tag1 per haploid genome, as determined by Southern blot analysis. The only exception, Bf-1 from Bretagny-sur-Orge, France, had four copies. Two ecotypes, Di-G and S96, gave identical Southern blot patterns to that of Landsberg erecta and were subsequently shown to contain Tag1 at the same two positions found in Landsberg erecta (loci designated as Tag1-2 and Tag1-3). Two other ecotypes, Ag-0 and Lo-1, had a Tag1 element located at Tag1-2 but not at Tag1-3. The distance between these two loci was determined to be 0.37 cM. Analysis of DNA from two related species, A. griffithiana and A. pumila, showed that both species contain sequences that hybridize to Tag1 and that could be amplified with an oligonucleotide specific to the terminal inverted repeats of Tag1. These results show that Tag1 and related elements are present, and may be useful for insertional mutagenesis, in many A. thaliana ecotypes and several Arabidopsis species. Received: 18 August 1997 / Accepted: 9 October 1997 |
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Keywords: | Tag1 Transposon Arabidopsis |
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