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"Retroelements - physiology"
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Mobile DNA in Health and Disease
2017
More than half the human genome is derived from transposable elements (also known as mobile DNA or “jumping genes”); some of these elements have been repurposed over time in the service of evolution. “Live” mobile elements are a rare cause of genetic disease.
Journal Article
Contribution of retrotransposition to developmental disorders
2019
Mobile genetic Elements (MEs) are segments of DNA which can copy themselves and other transcribed sequences through the process of retrotransposition (RT). In humans several disorders have been attributed to RT, but the role of RT in severe developmental disorders (DD) has not yet been explored. Here we identify RT-derived events in 9738 exome sequenced trios with DD-affected probands. We ascertain 9 de novo MEs, 4 of which are likely causative of the patient’s symptoms (0.04%), as well as 2 de novo gene retroduplications. Beyond identifying likely diagnostic RT events, we estimate genome-wide germline ME mutation rate and selective constraint and demonstrate that coding RT events have signatures of purifying selection equivalent to those of truncating mutations. Overall, our analysis represents a comprehensive interrogation of the impact of retrotransposition on protein coding genes and a framework for future evolutionary and disease studies.
Retrotransposition events have been linked to some human disorders. Here, Gardner et al. systematically search for mobile genetic elements (ME) in trio whole exome-sequencing datasets and ascertain 9 de novo MEs and further estimate genome-wide germline ME burden and constraint.
Journal Article
Transposon-derived small RNAs triggered by miR845 mediate genome dosage response in Arabidopsis
2018
Chromosome dosage has substantial effects on reproductive isolation and speciation in both plants and animals, but the underlying mechanisms are largely obscure
1
. Transposable elements in animals can regulate hybridity through maternal small RNA
2
, whereas small RNAs in plants have been postulated to regulate dosage response via neighboring imprinted genes
3
,
4
. Here we show that a highly conserved microRNA in plants, miR845, targets the tRNA
Met
primer-binding site (PBS) of long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons in
Arabidopsis
pollen, and triggers the accumulation of 21–22-nucleotide (nt) small RNAs in a dose-dependent fashion via RNA polymerase IV. We show that these epigenetically activated small interfering RNAs (easiRNAs) mediate hybridization barriers between diploid seed parents and tetraploid pollen parents (the ‘triploid block’), and that natural variation for miR845 may account for ‘endosperm balance’ allowing the formation of triploid seeds. Targeting of the PBS with small RNA is a common mechanism for transposon control in mammals and plants, and provides a uniquely sensitive means to monitor chromosome dosage and imprinting in the developing seed.
A conserved microRNA targets LTR retrotransposons in
Arabidopsis
pollen, stimulating epigenetically activated siRNAs in a dose-dependent manner through RNA Pol IV. These miR845b-dependent easiRNAs mediate the interploidy hybridization barrier that leads to seed abortion.
Journal Article
Stress and the dynamic genome: Steroids, epigenetics, and the transposome
by
Pfaff, Donald W.
,
Gagnidze, Khatuna
,
Hunter, Richard G.
in
Animals
,
Biological Sciences
,
Enzymes
2015
Stress plays a substantial role in shaping behavior and brain function, often with lasting effects. How these lasting effects occur in the context of a fixed postmitotic neuronal genome has been an enduring question for the field. Synaptic plasticity and neurogenesis have provided some of the answers to this question, and more recently epigenetic mechanisms have come to the fore. The exploration of epigenetic mechanisms recently led us to discover that a single acute stress can regulate the expression of retrotransposons in the rat hippocampus via an epigenetic mechanism. We propose that this response may represent a genomic stress response aimed at maintaining genomic and transcriptional stability in vulnerable brain regions such as the hippocampus. This finding and those of other researchers have made clear that retrotransposons and the genomic plasticity they permit play a significant role in brain function during stress and disease. These observations also raise the possibility that the transposome might have adaptive functions at the level of both evolution and the individual organism.
Journal Article
Retrotransposons in the development and progression of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
by
Bubb, Vivien J
,
Breen, Gerome
,
Savage, Abigail L
in
Aging
,
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
,
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis - etiology
2019
Endogenous retrotransposon sequences constitute approximately 42% of the human genome, and mobilisation of retrotransposons has resulted in rearrangements, duplications, deletions, novel transcripts and the introduction of new regulatory domains throughout the human genome. Both germline and somatic de novo retrotransposition events have been involved in a range of human diseases, and there is emerging evidence for the modulation of retrotransposon activity during the development of specific diseases. Particularly, there is unequivocal consensus that endogenous retrotransposition can occur in neuronal lineages. This review addresses our current knowledge of the different mechanisms through which retrotransposons might influence the development of and predisposition to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
Journal Article
Murine endogenous retroviruses
by
Stocking, C
,
Kozak, C A
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Animals
,
Endogenous Retroviruses - classification
2008
Up to 10% of the mouse genome is comprised of endogenous retrovirus (ERV) sequences, and most represent the remains of ancient germ line infections. Our knowledge of the three distinct classes of ERVs is inversely correlated with their copy number, and their characterization has benefited from the availability of divergent wild mouse species and subspecies, and from ongoing analysis of the Mus genome sequence. In contrast to human ERVs, which are nearly all extinct, active mouse ERVs can still be found in all three ERV classes. The distribution and diversity of ERVs has been shaped by host-virus interactions over the course of evolution, but ERVs have also been pivotal in shaping the mouse genome by altering host genes through insertional mutagenesis, by adding novel regulatory and coding sequences, and by their co-option by host cells as retroviral resistance genes. We review mechanisms by which an adaptive coexistence has evolved. (Part of a multi-author review).
Journal Article
Role of retrotransposon-derived imprinted gene, Rtl1, in the feto-maternal interface of mouse placenta
by
Ishino, Fumitoshi
,
Sekita, Yoichi
,
Wagatsuma, Hirotaka
in
Agriculture
,
Alleles
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
2008
Eutherian placenta, an organ that emerged in the course of mammalian evolution, provides essential architecture, the so-called feto-maternal interface, for fetal development by exchanging nutrition, gas and waste between fetal and maternal blood. Functional defects of the placenta cause several developmental disorders, such as intrauterine growth retardation in humans and mice. A series of new inventions and/or adaptations must have been necessary to form and maintain eutherian chorioallantoic placenta, which consists of capillary endothelial cells and a surrounding trophoblast cell layer(s)
1
. Although many placental genes have been identified
2
, it remains unknown how the feto-maternal interface is formed and maintained during development, and how this novel design evolved. Here we demonstrate that retrotransposon-derived
Rtl1
(retrotransposon-like 1), also known as
Peg11
(paternally expressed 11), is essential for maintenance of the fetal capillaries, and that both its loss and its overproduction cause late-fetal and/or neonatal lethality in mice.
Journal Article
Mutations in Eml1 lead to ectopic progenitors and neuronal heterotopia in mouse and human
2014
Kielar and colleagues identified mutations in the microtubule-associated protein Eml1 in patients with severe cortical heterotopia. Using animal and cell models, the authors found that Eml1 inactivation alters spindle orientation in dividing neuronal progenitors during early corticogenesis, leading to their detachment from the ventricular zone, their accumulation in the intermediate zone and the subsequent development of subcortical heterotopia.
Neuronal migration disorders such as lissencephaly and subcortical band heterotopia are associated with epilepsy and intellectual disability.
DCX
,
PAFAH1B1
and
TUBA1A
are mutated in these disorders; however, corresponding mouse mutants do not show heterotopic neurons in the neocortex. In contrast, spontaneously arisen HeCo mice display this phenotype, and our study revealed that misplaced apical progenitors contribute to heterotopia formation. While HeCo neurons migrated at the same speed as wild type, abnormally distributed dividing progenitors were found throughout the cortical wall from embryonic day 13. We identified
Eml1
, encoding a microtubule-associated protein, as the gene mutated in HeCo mice. Full-length transcripts were lacking as a result of a retrotransposon insertion in an intron.
Eml1
knockdown mimicked the HeCo progenitor phenotype and reexpression rescued it. We further found
EML1
to be mutated in ribbon-like heterotopia in humans. Our data link abnormal spindle orientations, ectopic progenitors and severe heterotopia in mouse and human.
Journal Article
Meiotic catastrophe and retrotransposon reactivation in male germ cells lacking Dnmt3L
by
Bestor, Timothy H.
,
Bourc'his, Déborah
in
Animals
,
Base Sequence
,
Biological and medical sciences
2004
Mammalian genomes employ heritable cytosine methylation in the long-term silencing of retrotransposons and genes subject to genomic imprinting and X chromosome inactivation. Little is known of the mechanisms that direct cytosine methylation to specific sequences. Here we show that DNA methyltransferase 3-like (Dnmt3L (ref.
1
)) is expressed in testes during a brief perinatal period in the non-dividing precursors of spermatogonial stem cells at a stage where retrotransposons undergo
de novo
methylation. Deletion of the
Dnmt3L
gene prevented the
de novo
methylation of both long-terminal-repeat (LTR) and non-LTR retrotransposons, which were transcribed at high levels in spermatogonia and spermatocytes. Loss of Dnmt3L from early germ cells also caused meiotic failure in spermatocytes, which do not express Dnmt3L. Whereas dispersed repeated sequences were demethylated in mutant germ cells, tandem repeats in pericentric regions were methylated normally. This result indicates that the Dnmt3L protein might have a function in the
de novo
methylation of dispersed repeated sequences in a premeiotic genome scanning process that occurs in male germ cells at about the time of birth.
Journal Article
Essential factors involved in the precise targeting and insertion of telomere-specific non-LTR retrotransposon, SART1Bm
2020
Telomere length maintenance is essential for most eukaryotes to ensure genome stability and integrity. A non-long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposon, SART1Bm, targets telomeric repeats (TTAGG)n of the silkworm
Bombyx mori
and is presumably involved in telomere length maintenance. However, how many telomeric repeats are required for its retrotransposition and how reverse transcription is initiated at the target site are not well understood. Here, using an
ex vivo
and
trans-in vivo
recombinant baculovirus retrotransposition system, we demonstrated that SART1Bm requires at least three (TTAGG) telomeric repeats and a longer poly(A) tail for its accurate retrotransposition. We found that SART1Bm retrotransposed only in the third (TTAGG) tract of three repeats and that the A residue of the (TTAGG) unit was essential for its retrotransposition. Interestingly, SART1Bm also retrotransposed into telomeric repeats of other species, such as human (TTAGGG)n repeats, albeit with low retrotransposition efficiency. We further showed that the reverse transcription of SART1Bm occurred inaccurately at the internal site of the 3′ untranslated region (UTR) when using a short poly(A) tail but at the accurate site when using a longer poly(A) tail. These findings promote our understanding of the general mechanisms of site-specific retrotransposition and aid the development of a site-specific gene knock-in tool.
Journal Article