Dynamics of Vulmar/Vulmite Group of Transposable Elements in Chenopodiaceae Subfamily Betoideae

Dynamics of Vulmar/Vulmite Group of Transposable Elements in Chenopodiaceae Subfamily Betoideae

View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Springer - Publisher Connector Genetica (2011) 139:1209–1216 DOI 10.1007/s10709-011-9622-9 Dynamics of Vulmar/VulMITE group of transposable elements in Chenopodiaceae subfamily Betoideae Dariusz Grzebelus • Krzysztof Stawujak • Justyna Mitoraj • Marek Szklarczyk Received: 7 June 2011 / Accepted: 5 December 2011 / Published online: 15 December 2011 Ó The Author(s) 2011. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract Transposable elements are important factors observed with TD markers, including presence of distinct driving plant genome evolution. Upon their mobilization, subsets of TE insertions specific to Beta and Patellifolia. novel insertion polymorphisms are being created. We investigated differences in copy number and insertion Keywords Beta Á Insertion polymorphism Á Mariner Á polymorphism of a group of Mariner-like transposable Miniature inverted repeat transposable elements Á elements Vulmar and related VulMITE miniature inverted- Patellifolia Á Sugar beet repeat transposable elements (MITEs) in species represent- ing subfamily Betoideae. Insertion sites of these elements were identified using a modified transposon display pro- Introduction tocol, allowing amplification of longer fragments repre- senting regions flanking insertion sites. Subsequently, a Transposable elements (TEs) constitute a significant por- subset of TD fragments was converted into insertion site- tion of plant genomes. Their content in Angiospermae based polymorphism (ISBP) markers. The investigated genomes varies from ca. 10% in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis group of transposable elements was the most abundant in Genome Initiative 2000) to ca. 85% in maize genome accessions representing the section Beta, showing intra- (Schnable et al. 2009). TEs are capable of changing their specific insertion polymorphisms likely resulting from their localization in the genome and their activity may alter gene recent activity. In contrast, no unique insertions were structure and regulatory functions or cause genome rear- observed for species of the genus Beta section Corollinae, rangements (Bennetzen 2000). On the basis of their while a set of section-specific insertions was observed in mechanism of transposition, TEs are divided into two the genus Patellifolia, however, only two of them were classes. Class I elements include retrotransposons which polymorphic between P. procumbens and P. webbiana.We transpose via an RNA intermediate. Subsequently, the hypothesize that Vulmar and VulMITE elements were RNA is reverse-transcribed and the DNA copy is integrated inactivated in the section Corollinae, while they remained into a new genomic location. The ‘copy and paste’ trans- active in the section Beta and the genus Patellifolia. The position is replicative and each transposition event leads to ISBP markers generally confirmed the insertion patterns increase of the TE copy number. In contrast, Class II ele- ments—DNA transposons, are mobilized on the basis of a ‘cut and paste’ mechanism, i.e. their mobilization requires physical excision from a donor site and reintegration into a Electronic supplementary material The online version of this new acceptor site. Autonomous elements contain func- article (doi:10.1007/s10709-011-9622-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. tional open reading frame(s) that encode the products required for transposition. Deletions in the coding regions D. Grzebelus (&) Á K. Stawujak Á J. Mitoraj Á M. Szklarczyk are typical for non-autonomous elements, which never- Department of Genetics, Plant Breeding, and Seed Science, theless may be activated in trans, provided that the University of Agriculture in Krakow, Al. 29 Listopada 54, 31-425 Krako´w, Poland required transposition machinery encoded by a related e-mail: [email protected] autonomous element is present (Wessler 2006). 123 1210 Genetica (2011) 139:1209–1216 Autonomous elements and their non-autonomous genus Beta, which was divided into four sections Ulbrich derivatives are grouped into families defined by DNA (1934). The section Procumbentes, grouping B. procum- sequence conservation (Wicker et al. 2007). TE families bens, B. patellaris, and B. webbiana was eventually differ in the TE copy number, which can be exceptionally removed from the genus Beta and the species were inclu- high for some retrotransposon families. Also, a particular ded in the genus Patellifolia (Scott et al. 1977). According group of TEs, called miniature inverted-repeat transposable to the current USDA/ARS NPGS GRIN taxonomy (www. elements (MITEs) can reach hundreds to thousands copies ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/gnlist.pl?2303, August 17, per haploid genome (Feschotte et al. 2002a). MITEs are 2011), both Beta and Patellifolia are classified in subfamily small, up to 600 bp, DNA transposons lacking any coding Chenopodioideae, tribe Beteae. However, Hohmann et al. capacity. They were identified in several plant species, (2006) placed them in subfamily Betoideae, and provided including maize (Bureau and Wessler 1992), rice (Bureau molecular evidence for further division of Betoideae into and Wessler 1994a, b), Arabidopsis (Casacuberta et al. Beteae comprising all Beta species, and a sister group, 1998, Feschotte et al. 2003), carrot (Grzebelus and Simon Hablitzieae, including Patellifolia. Within Beteae, two 2009), and Medicago (Grzebelus et al. 2009). Because of sections are recognized—section Beta, comprising B. vul- the shared structural features, it was proposed that MITEs garis and B. macrocarpa, and section Corollinae, com- were reminiscent of non-autonomous elements. It is likely prising B. corolliflora, B. lomatogona, B. macrorhiza, that the high copy number of MITEs is an effect of their in B. trygina, and B. nana (Kadereit et al. 2006). trans activation by related autonomous elements (Feschotte Here, we describe differences in the copy number and et al. 2002b). insertion polymorphism of Vulmar/VulMITE transposons A Vulmar/VulMITE group of TEs identified in Beta among Beta and Patellifolia species, likely reflecting dif- could be an example of such interrelationship. Vulmar1 is a ferences in evolutionary dynamics of these elements. TE belonging to the Tc1/mariner superfamily and a rep- resentative of the Vulmar family. Vulmar1 is 3,909 bp- long, non-autonomous due to frameshifts in the transposase Materials and methods gene. However, many open reading frames coding for mariner-like transposases were identified in beet, some of Plant material and DNA extraction them likely representing autonomous elements, including those from the Vulmar family (Jacobs et al. 2004). Menzel Two male sterile and two corresponding maintainer (Owen et al. (2006) reported on three MITE families, named type) sugar beet breeding stocks (KHBC Straszko´w, VulMITE I, II, and III, present in B. vulgaris and related to Poland), together with four wild Beta species, i.e. B. vul- the Vulmar elements. While VulMITE I were typical garis subsp. maritima (section Beta), B. corolliflora, MITEs with length of ca. 300 bp, the other two families B. lomatogona, B. macrorhiza (section Corollinae), and were ca. 1 kb-long. Sequence similarity of the MITEs and two Patellifolia species, i.e. P. procumbens, and Vulmar1 was restricted to less than 200 bp 50 and 30 ter- P. webbiana, were used for Vulmar/VulMITE transposon minal regions. Menzel et al. (2006) also indicated that display (VMTD). Each accession was represented by two insertions of VulMITE I elements were polymorphic in plants. Insertion site-based polymorphism (ISBP) markers Beta, resulting from transposition events, likely in the were applied to the above materials and few additional course of beet domestication. sugar beet and beetroot stocks (Table 1). DNA was A successful transposition event results in a novel extracted with DNeasy Mini Kit (Qiagen) as described in insertion polymorphism. It can be detected by a range of the manufacturer protocol. techniques, including transposon display (TD). Transposon display is a modification of the AFLP system, in which Vulmar/VulMITE transposon display (VMTD) subterminal fragments of transposons are used as target sequences. MITE-based transposon display was used to Approximately 300 ng of DNA samples were digested in detect insertion polymorphisms in maize (Casa et al. 2000), 37°C for 3 h in 10 ll reaction mixture with 5 u NdeI rice (Park et al. 2003, Jiang et al. 2003, Kwon et al. 2006), (Fermentas). NdeI-compatible splinkerette adaptors were and carrot (Grzebelus and Simon 2009). TE insertion ligated to the restriction fragments according to the pro- polymorphisms can be applied to elucidate interspecific tocol of Grzebelus et al. (2007). Preamplification was evolutionary relationships (Ray 2007). In order to investi- performed with a primer VMtd1 (50 GCCTAGGAG gate such relationships in Betoideae, we used TD approach TCCGTTTTAATCAC 30), specific to 50 subterminal region to study Vulmar/VulMITE insertion polymorphisms. of Vulmar1 and VulMITE elements (Menzel et al. 2006), Historically, all investigated species, representing fam- and with an adaptor-specific primer tdP1 (50 CGAATCG ily Chenopodiaceae/Amaranthaceae, were grouped in the TAACCGTTCGTACGAGAA 30)in10ll reaction 123 Genetica (2011) 139:1209–1216 1211 Table 1 List of plant materials used for transposon display (TD) and insertion site-based polymorphism (ISBP) Code Group Genus Section Species Stock Origin Number of analyzed plants TD ISBP 203O

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    8 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us