Bacterial insertion sequences

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Bacterial insertion sequences  Hybridization experiments for gal- insertion mutants found that same sequence over & over again   In various gal- alleles   In other parts of the bacterial chromosome

 Found other repeated Insertion Sequences through similar hybridization experiments

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Bacterial insertion sequences  Structure:   Encodes transposase protein (performs transposition)   Terminal inverted repeats (required for transposition)   Target site duplication (created during insertion)

EG 21.1

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Bacterial transposons  Composite   Bacterial genes flanked by 2 Insertion Sequences   Depending on transposon, both IS’s could move on own…   OR one IS may be disabled & transposition depends on the intact IS See also Fig 14-6a

EG 21-2,3

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Bacterial transposons  Simple   No insertion sequences   Flanked by inverted repeats   Encodes transposase

 Tn3

Fig 14-6b T Western Biol 202

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Mechanisms of transposition  Conservative – “cut & paste” into new location   e.g. Tn10

 Replicative – adds new copy   e.g. Tn3

Fig 14-9 T Western Biol 202

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Conservative transposition  Transposasemediated Cuts at target site Cuts out from old site Inserts in new site Host repairs cut sites to generate target site duplication   e.g. Tn10        

Fig 14-8 T Western Biol 202

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Replicative transposition

Fig 14-10 T Western Biol 202

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Medical consequences of bacterial transposons

 Multiresistance plasmids

Fig 14-7 T Western Biol 202

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Medical consequences of bacterial transposons  Multiresistance plasmids

  Form through:   transposition into plasmid   Recombination between IS’s T Western Biol 202

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Medical consequences of bacterial transposons  Multiresistance plasmids   Can easy pass between bacteria by conjugation   Not limited by species

Fig 14-10

Fig 5-8 T Western Biol 202

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Eukaryotic transposable elements   2 types:

Class I - Retrotransposons LTR retrotransposons LTR

GAG

POL

LTR

Non-LTR retrotransposons LINEs -polyA SINEs 5’UTR

ORF1

ORF2

3’UTR

-polyA

Class II ‒ DNA transposons TIR

transposase

(ORF2)

TIR

N. Juretic T Western Biol 202

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Retroviruses & retrotransposons   Retroviruses   RNA genome

  DNA copy with reverse transcriptase   Insert into host genome for multiplication Fig 14-11 T Western Biol 202

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Retroviruses & retrotransposons  Features of a retrovirus        

Long terminal [direct] repeats (LTR) gag – structural protein of capsid pol – reverse transcriptase env – protein of virus envelope

Fig 14-12a T Western Biol 202

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Retroviruses & retrotransposons  Retrotransposons resemble a retrovirus without the env gene

Fig 14-12b,c

 So, is a retrovtransposon a failed virus OR  Is a virus an escaped retrotransposon? T Western Biol 202

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Transposition of retrotransposons

  Much like retrovirus with DNA copy returned to nucleus & inserted back into the genome   Rather than making many RNA copies that are packaged T Western Biol 202

Fig 14-13

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Transposition of retrotransposons  Proof of RNA intermediate   Ty1 element of yeast   Engineered Ty1 on plasmid inducible by galactose   Engineered Ty1 contains intron   When induce transcription got increased transposition   New inserts of Ty1 lacked intron! Fig 14-14

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Variations on retrotransposons  Drosophila   copia elements – “standard”   gypsy elements still have env!

Fig 13-15c

 Humans        

Long Interspersed Elements (LINEs) & SINEs Atypical – not organized like standard retrotransposon Still has pol LINEs are autonomous & SINEs are nonautonomous

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Fig 14-20

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  Return to nucleus as RNA with 2 encoded proteins

Transposition of LINEs (L1)

  ORF2 = endonuclease to cut DNA + reverse transcriptase to copy RNA into DNA

Cytoplasm

Nucleus T Western Biol 202

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Eukaryotic transposable elements   2 types:

Class I - Retrotransposons LTR retrotransposons LTR

GAG

POL

LTR

Non-LTR retrotransposons LINEs -polyA SINEs 5’UTR

ORF1

ORF2

3’UTR

-polyA

Class II ‒ DNA transposons TIR

transposase

(ORF2)

TIR

N. Juretic T Western Biol 202

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Barbara McClintock’s “controlling elements” are DNA transposons

 Ds is nonautonomous   Requires Ac to move

 Ac is autonomous

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Fig 14-4

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Barbara McClintock’s “controlling elements” are DNA transposons   Ac/Ds of maize   Ds elements are Ac elements with internal deletions that lead to loss of transposase function

  Other families of autonomous/ nonautonomous transposable elements in maize   E.g. En/Spm

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Barbara McClintock’s “controlling elements” are DNA transposons  Transposition mechanism of Ac   All done by transposase

 Transposons can leave “footprints” if recombination is imprecise   Will become stable mutation rather than return to wildtype condition T Western Biol 202

Fig 14-18

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Hybrid dysgenesis is the result of DNA transposons (P elements)   Crosses of wild isolate males (P) x lab strain females (M) Female (wild)

  F1 progeny sterile – chromosome breakage, unstable mutations in germ line   Unstable mutations of white from dysgenic cross reminscent of what seen before…

Fig 14-15

Male (lab stock)

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Hybrid dysgenesis is the result of DNA transposons (P elements)  P elements of Drosophila   Are also nonautonomous versions with internal deletions

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Fig 14-16

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Hybrid dysgenesis is the result of DNA transposons (P elements)   Hybrid dysgenesis explained:   P cytotype (wild) strains have a repressor of P element transposition in germline cells   M cytotype (lab) strains do not so P can transpose   Since mother contributes cytoplasm to zygote, only a problem with M females

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Fig 14-17

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Hybrid dysgenesis is the result of DNA transposons (P elements)  P-repressor & Ptransposase encoded by alternative splicing:   Somatic cells – intron 3 unspliced  repressor   Germ cells – all introns spliced  transposase

EG 21-24

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Hybrid dysgenesis is the result of DNA transposons (P elements)

  In P cytotype females, Prepressor deposited into oocytes, so “immune”

EG 21-25

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Eukaryotic transposable elements   2 types:

Class I - Retrotransposons LTR retrotransposons LTR

GAG

POL

LTR

Non-LTR retrotransposons LINEs -polyA SINEs 5’UTR

ORF1

ORF2

3’UTR

-polyA

Class II ‒ DNA transposons TIR

transposase

(ORF2)

TIR

N. Juretic T Western Biol 202

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Harnessing of eukaryotic transposable elements  P elements as a molecular biology tool   Insertional mutagenesis   Let transposons “jump” & isolate rare stable mutants   Mutants created by insertional mutagenesis have a “tag” of known DNA sequence so easy to clone affected genes (often called “transposon tagging”) T Western Biol 202

Fig 14-17

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Harnessing of eukaryotic transposable elements

 P elements for Drosophila transformation

Fig 14-19

  Use to “transform” flies with particular genes   P element used as carrier to insert a gene into the chromosomes of germ cells of the dysgenic flies   Progeny will reflect the expression of that gene T Western Biol 202

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Transposable elements & host genomes   DNA sequences that can move and multiply within the genome   selfish DNA

  self-replication: necessary and sufficient explanation

  Explanation for the C-value Paradox

N. Juretic T Western Biol 202

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Transposons & genome size   C value paradox   Genome size doesn’t correlate with complexity of organism or with gene number Organism

Genome size (Mbp)

Number predicted genes

Yeast

12

6,144

Arabidopsis

125

25,706

Rice

400

37,500

Maize

2500

50,000

C. elegans

103

20,598

Drosophila

170

13,525

Pufferfish

329

22,089

Humans

3223

~24,000 T Western Biol 202

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Transposons & genome size   Larger genome, more transposons… Organism

Genome size (Mbp)

Number predicted genes

Percent genome is transposons

Yeast

12

6,144

Arabidopsis

125

25,706

10.5%

Rice

400

37,500

35%

Maize

2500

50,000

80%

C. elegans

103

20,598

6.5%

Drosophila

170

13,525

3.1%

Pufferfish

329

22,089

2.7%

Humans

3223

~24,000

45% T Western Biol 202

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Transposons & genome size   Larger genome, more transposons…

Fig 14-22 T Western Biol 202

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Transposons & the human genome   ~45% of genome is transposable elements Figs 14-20

Fig 14-21

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Transposable elements & host genomes   DNA sequences that can move and multiply within the genome   selfish DNA

  self-replication: necessary and sufficient explanation

  How do these selfish elements avoid killing their hosts?   If host dies or goes extinct, no transposable elements

N. Juretic T Western Biol 202

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How can so many transposons be maintained? Fig 14-15

 Transposon graveyard

Female (wild)

Male (labstock)

  most are “dead”   Lost transposase or mutations to flanking repeats

 Inactive transposons   Kept off by transposon repressors   Tend to activate under stress conditions T Western Biol 202

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How can so many transposons be maintained?  Inconspicuous   Found in between genes & in introns

Fig 14-21

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How can so many transposons be maintained?  Inconspicuous   Found in between genes & in introns   Insert into each other (looks like just one to genome…)

Nearly all RTE insertions are into even older RTEs. A portion of a maize chromosome is illustrated. (Walbot et al 2001 PNAS) T Western Biol 202

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How can so many transposons be maintained?  Inconspicuous   Found in between genes & in introns   Insert into each other (looks like just one to genome…)   Safe havens

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How can so many transposons be maintained?  Host is able to inactivate   Often found in heterochromatin – kept off by methylation, etc   Other host mechanisms related to those used to suppress virus replication

Fig 13-29 T Western Biol 202

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Transposable elements & host genome evolution   DNA sequences that can move and multiply within the genome   selfish DNA

  self-replication: necessary and sufficient explanation

  Transposable elements can be harnessed by their hosts for genomic elements & genome evolution

N. Juretic T Western Biol 202

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Transposable elements & genome structure  Useful   Structural role around centromeres?   Telomeres of Drosophila - composed of retrotransposons – HeT-A & TART

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Transposable elements & genome structure  Mediate genome evolution?   New combinations of genes or gene elements through recombination between homologous transposable elements

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