Evolution of pogo, a separate superfamily of IS630-Tc1-mariner transposons, revealing recurrent domestication events in vertebrates

Abstracts Background Tc1/mariner and Zator, as two superfamilies of IS630-Tc1-mariner (ITm) group, have been well-defined. However, the molecular evolution and domestication of pogo transposons, once designated as an important family of the Tc1/mariner superfamily, are still poorly understood. Resul...

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Main Authors: Bo Gao, Yali Wang, Mohamed Diaby, Wencheng Zong, Dan Shen, Saisai Wang, Cai Chen, Xiaoyan Wang, Chengyi Song
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:Mobile DNA
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13100-020-00220-0
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spelling doaj-a237db83c5754b98a8bb2ecb14d85d5a2020-11-25T03:33:04ZengBMCMobile DNA1759-87532020-07-0111111510.1186/s13100-020-00220-0Evolution of pogo, a separate superfamily of IS630-Tc1-mariner transposons, revealing recurrent domestication events in vertebratesBo Gao0Yali Wang1Mohamed Diaby2Wencheng Zong3Dan Shen4Saisai Wang5Cai Chen6Xiaoyan Wang7Chengyi Song8College of Animal Science and Technology, Yangzhou UniversityCollege of Animal Science and Technology, Yangzhou UniversityCollege of Animal Science and Technology, Yangzhou UniversityCollege of Animal Science and Technology, Yangzhou UniversityCollege of Animal Science and Technology, Yangzhou UniversityCollege of Animal Science and Technology, Yangzhou UniversityCollege of Animal Science and Technology, Yangzhou UniversityCollege of Animal Science and Technology, Yangzhou UniversityCollege of Animal Science and Technology, Yangzhou UniversityAbstracts Background Tc1/mariner and Zator, as two superfamilies of IS630-Tc1-mariner (ITm) group, have been well-defined. However, the molecular evolution and domestication of pogo transposons, once designated as an important family of the Tc1/mariner superfamily, are still poorly understood. Results Here, phylogenetic analysis show that pogo transposases, together with Tc1/mariner, DD34E/Gambol, and Zator transposases form four distinct monophyletic clades with high bootstrap supports (> = 74%), suggesting that they are separate superfamilies of ITm group. The pogo superfamily represents high diversity with six distinct families (Passer, Tigger, pogoR, Lemi, Mover, and Fot/Fot-like) and wide distribution with an expansion spanning across all the kingdoms of eukaryotes. It shows widespread occurrences in animals and fungi, but restricted taxonomic distribution in land plants. It has invaded almost all lineages of animals—even mammals—and has been domesticated repeatedly in vertebrates, with 12 genes, including centromere-associated protein B (CENPB), CENPB DNA-binding domain containing 1 (CENPBD1), Jrk helix–turn–helix protein (JRK), JRK like (JRKL), pogo transposable element derived with KRAB domain (POGK), and with ZNF domain (POGZ), and Tigger transposable element-derived 2 to 7 (TIGD2–7), deduced as originating from this superfamily. Two of them (JRKL and TIGD2) seem to have been co-domesticated, and the others represent independent domestication events. Four genes (TIGD3, TIGD4, TIGD5, and POGZ) tend to represent ancient domestications in vertebrates, while the others only emerge in mammals and seem to be domesticated recently. Significant structural variations including target site duplication (TSD) types and the DDE triad signatures (DD29–56D) were observed for pogo transposons. Most domesticated genes are derived from the complete transposase genes; but CENPB, POGK, and POGZ are chimeric genes fused with additional functional domains. Conclusions This is the first report to systematically reveal the evolutionary profiles of the pogo transposons, suggesting that pogo and Tc1/Mariner are two separate superfamilies of ITm group, and demonstrating the repeated domestications of pogo in vertebrates. These data indicate that pogo transposons have played important roles in shaping the genome and gene evolution of fungi and animals. This study expands our understanding of the diversity of pogo transposons and updates the classification of ITm group.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13100-020-00220-0pogoDNA transposonsTc1/marinerIS630, EvolutionDomestication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bo Gao
Yali Wang
Mohamed Diaby
Wencheng Zong
Dan Shen
Saisai Wang
Cai Chen
Xiaoyan Wang
Chengyi Song
spellingShingle Bo Gao
Yali Wang
Mohamed Diaby
Wencheng Zong
Dan Shen
Saisai Wang
Cai Chen
Xiaoyan Wang
Chengyi Song
Evolution of pogo, a separate superfamily of IS630-Tc1-mariner transposons, revealing recurrent domestication events in vertebrates
Mobile DNA
pogo
DNA transposons
Tc1/mariner
IS630, Evolution
Domestication
author_facet Bo Gao
Yali Wang
Mohamed Diaby
Wencheng Zong
Dan Shen
Saisai Wang
Cai Chen
Xiaoyan Wang
Chengyi Song
author_sort Bo Gao
title Evolution of pogo, a separate superfamily of IS630-Tc1-mariner transposons, revealing recurrent domestication events in vertebrates
title_short Evolution of pogo, a separate superfamily of IS630-Tc1-mariner transposons, revealing recurrent domestication events in vertebrates
title_full Evolution of pogo, a separate superfamily of IS630-Tc1-mariner transposons, revealing recurrent domestication events in vertebrates
title_fullStr Evolution of pogo, a separate superfamily of IS630-Tc1-mariner transposons, revealing recurrent domestication events in vertebrates
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of pogo, a separate superfamily of IS630-Tc1-mariner transposons, revealing recurrent domestication events in vertebrates
title_sort evolution of pogo, a separate superfamily of is630-tc1-mariner transposons, revealing recurrent domestication events in vertebrates
publisher BMC
series Mobile DNA
issn 1759-8753
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstracts Background Tc1/mariner and Zator, as two superfamilies of IS630-Tc1-mariner (ITm) group, have been well-defined. However, the molecular evolution and domestication of pogo transposons, once designated as an important family of the Tc1/mariner superfamily, are still poorly understood. Results Here, phylogenetic analysis show that pogo transposases, together with Tc1/mariner, DD34E/Gambol, and Zator transposases form four distinct monophyletic clades with high bootstrap supports (> = 74%), suggesting that they are separate superfamilies of ITm group. The pogo superfamily represents high diversity with six distinct families (Passer, Tigger, pogoR, Lemi, Mover, and Fot/Fot-like) and wide distribution with an expansion spanning across all the kingdoms of eukaryotes. It shows widespread occurrences in animals and fungi, but restricted taxonomic distribution in land plants. It has invaded almost all lineages of animals—even mammals—and has been domesticated repeatedly in vertebrates, with 12 genes, including centromere-associated protein B (CENPB), CENPB DNA-binding domain containing 1 (CENPBD1), Jrk helix–turn–helix protein (JRK), JRK like (JRKL), pogo transposable element derived with KRAB domain (POGK), and with ZNF domain (POGZ), and Tigger transposable element-derived 2 to 7 (TIGD2–7), deduced as originating from this superfamily. Two of them (JRKL and TIGD2) seem to have been co-domesticated, and the others represent independent domestication events. Four genes (TIGD3, TIGD4, TIGD5, and POGZ) tend to represent ancient domestications in vertebrates, while the others only emerge in mammals and seem to be domesticated recently. Significant structural variations including target site duplication (TSD) types and the DDE triad signatures (DD29–56D) were observed for pogo transposons. Most domesticated genes are derived from the complete transposase genes; but CENPB, POGK, and POGZ are chimeric genes fused with additional functional domains. Conclusions This is the first report to systematically reveal the evolutionary profiles of the pogo transposons, suggesting that pogo and Tc1/Mariner are two separate superfamilies of ITm group, and demonstrating the repeated domestications of pogo in vertebrates. These data indicate that pogo transposons have played important roles in shaping the genome and gene evolution of fungi and animals. This study expands our understanding of the diversity of pogo transposons and updates the classification of ITm group.
topic pogo
DNA transposons
Tc1/mariner
IS630, Evolution
Domestication
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13100-020-00220-0
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