The evolution of tyrosine-recombinase elements in Nematoda.

Transposable elements can be categorised into DNA and RNA elements based on their mechanism of transposition. Tyrosine recombinase elements (YREs) are relatively rare and poorly understood, despite sharing characteristics with both DNA and RNA elements. Previously, the Nematoda have been reported to...

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Main Authors: Amir Szitenberg, Georgios Koutsovoulos, Mark L Blaxter, David H Lunt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4157794?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b108189afe3e42b19b86522f0e3fbd7d2020-11-24T21:57:29ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0199e10663010.1371/journal.pone.0106630The evolution of tyrosine-recombinase elements in Nematoda.Amir SzitenbergGeorgios KoutsovoulosMark L BlaxterDavid H LuntTransposable elements can be categorised into DNA and RNA elements based on their mechanism of transposition. Tyrosine recombinase elements (YREs) are relatively rare and poorly understood, despite sharing characteristics with both DNA and RNA elements. Previously, the Nematoda have been reported to have a substantially different diversity of YREs compared to other animal phyla: the Dirs1-like YRE retrotransposon was encountered in most animal phyla but not in Nematoda, and a unique Pat1-like YRE retrotransposon has only been recorded from Nematoda. We explored the diversity of YREs in Nematoda by sampling broadly across the phylum and including 34 genomes representing the three classes within Nematoda. We developed a method to isolate and classify YREs based on both feature organization and phylogenetic relationships in an open and reproducible workflow. We also ensured that our phylogenetic approach to YRE classification identified truncated and degenerate elements, informatively increasing the number of elements sampled. We identified Dirs1-like elements (thought to be absent from Nematoda) in the nematode classes Enoplia and Dorylaimia indicating that nematode model species do not adequately represent the diversity of transposable elements in the phylum. Nematode Pat1-like elements were found to be a derived form of another Pat1-like element that is present more widely in animals. Several sequence features used widely for the classification of YREs were found to be homoplasious, highlighting the need for a phylogenetically-based classification scheme. Nematode model species do not represent the diversity of transposable elements in the phylum.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4157794?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amir Szitenberg
Georgios Koutsovoulos
Mark L Blaxter
David H Lunt
spellingShingle Amir Szitenberg
Georgios Koutsovoulos
Mark L Blaxter
David H Lunt
The evolution of tyrosine-recombinase elements in Nematoda.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Amir Szitenberg
Georgios Koutsovoulos
Mark L Blaxter
David H Lunt
author_sort Amir Szitenberg
title The evolution of tyrosine-recombinase elements in Nematoda.
title_short The evolution of tyrosine-recombinase elements in Nematoda.
title_full The evolution of tyrosine-recombinase elements in Nematoda.
title_fullStr The evolution of tyrosine-recombinase elements in Nematoda.
title_full_unstemmed The evolution of tyrosine-recombinase elements in Nematoda.
title_sort evolution of tyrosine-recombinase elements in nematoda.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Transposable elements can be categorised into DNA and RNA elements based on their mechanism of transposition. Tyrosine recombinase elements (YREs) are relatively rare and poorly understood, despite sharing characteristics with both DNA and RNA elements. Previously, the Nematoda have been reported to have a substantially different diversity of YREs compared to other animal phyla: the Dirs1-like YRE retrotransposon was encountered in most animal phyla but not in Nematoda, and a unique Pat1-like YRE retrotransposon has only been recorded from Nematoda. We explored the diversity of YREs in Nematoda by sampling broadly across the phylum and including 34 genomes representing the three classes within Nematoda. We developed a method to isolate and classify YREs based on both feature organization and phylogenetic relationships in an open and reproducible workflow. We also ensured that our phylogenetic approach to YRE classification identified truncated and degenerate elements, informatively increasing the number of elements sampled. We identified Dirs1-like elements (thought to be absent from Nematoda) in the nematode classes Enoplia and Dorylaimia indicating that nematode model species do not adequately represent the diversity of transposable elements in the phylum. Nematode Pat1-like elements were found to be a derived form of another Pat1-like element that is present more widely in animals. Several sequence features used widely for the classification of YREs were found to be homoplasious, highlighting the need for a phylogenetically-based classification scheme. Nematode model species do not represent the diversity of transposable elements in the phylum.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4157794?pdf=render
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