A transposable element (TE or transposon) is
a DNA
sequence that
can change its position within a genome,
sometimes creating or reversing mutations and altering the cell's genome size. Transposition often
results in duplication of the TE. Barbara
McClintock's discovery of these jumping
genes earned her a Nobel Prize in 1983.
Transposable elements
make up a large fraction of the genome and are responsible for much of the mass of DNA in a eukaryotic
cell. It has been shown that TEs are important in genome function and
evolution. In Oxytricha, which has a unique
genetic system, these elements play a critical role in development. Transposons are also very useful to
researchers as a means to alter DNA inside a living organism.
There are at least two
classes of TEs: Class I TEs or retrotransposons generally function via reverse transcription, while Class II TEs or DNA
transposons encode the protein transposase, which they require for
insertion and excision, and some of these TEs also encode other proteins.
Class
I (retrotransposons)
Class I TEs are copied in two stages: first, they are transcribed from DNA to RNA, and the RNA produced
is then reverse
transcribed to
DNA. This copied DNA is then inserted back into the genome at a new position.
The reverse transcription step is catalyzed by a reverse transcriptase, which is often
encoded by the TE itself. The characteristics of retrotransposons are similar
to retroviruses, such as HIV.
Retrotransposons are commonly grouped into three main orders:
·
TEs with long terminal repeats (LTRs), which encode reverse transcriptase, similar to
retroviruses
·
Long interspersed nuclear elements (LINEs, LINE-1s, or L1s), which encode
reverse transcriptase but lack LTRs, and are transcribed by RNA polymerase II
·
Short interspersed nuclear elements do not encode
reverse transcriptase and are transcribed by RNA polymerase III
[Note: Retroviruses
can also be considered TEs. For example, after conversion of retroviral RNA
into DNA inside a host cell, the newly produced retroviral DNA is integrated
into the genome of the host
cell. These integrated DNAs are termed proviruses.
The provirus is a specialized form of eukaryotic retrotransposon, which can produce RNA intermediates that
may leave the host cell and infect other cells. The transposition cycle of
retroviruses has similarities to that of prokaryotic TEs, suggesting a distant relationship between the two].
Class II (DNA transposons)
The cut-and-paste
transposition mechanism of class II TEs does not involve an RNA intermediate.
The transpositions are catalyzed by several transposase enzymes.
Some transposases non-specifically bind to any target site in DNA, whereas
others bind to specific target sequences. The transposase makes a staggered cut
at the target site producing sticky
ends, cuts out the DNA transposon and ligates it into the target site. A DNA polymerase fills in the resulting gaps from the
sticky ends and DNA ligase closes the sugar-phosphate backbone.
This results in target site duplication and the insertion sites of DNA
transposons may be identified by short direct repeats (a staggered cut in the
target DNA filled by DNA polymerase) followed by inverted repeats (which are
important for the TE excision by transposase).
Cut-and-paste TEs may be
duplicated if their transposition takes place during S phase of the cell cycle, when a donor site has
already been replicated but a target site has not yet been replicated. Such duplications at the target site
can result in gene duplication,
which plays an important role in genomic evolution.
Not all DNA transposons
transpose through the cut-and-paste mechanism. In some cases, a replicative transposition is observed in which a transposon
replicates itself to a new target site (e.g. helitron).
Class II TEs comprise
less than 2% of the human genome, making the rest Class I
Applications-
The first TE was
discovered in maize (Zea mays) and is named dissociator (Ds). Likewise,
the first TE to be molecularly isolated was from a plant (snapdragon).
Appropriately, TEs have been an especially useful tool in plant molecular
biology. Researchers use them as a means of mutagenesis. In this context, a TE
jumps into a gene and produces a mutation. The presence of such a TE provides a
straightforward means of identifying the mutant allele relative to chemical
mutagenesis methods.
Sometimes the insertion
of a TE into a gene can disrupt that gene's function in a reversible manner, in
a process called insertional
mutagenesis; transposase-mediated excision of the DNA transposon restores gene
function. This produces plants in which neighboring cells have different genotypes. This feature allows
researchers to distinguish between genes that must be present inside of a cell
in order to function (cell-autonomous) and genes that produce observable
effects in cells other than those where the gene is expressed.
TEs are also a widely
used tool for mutagenesis of most experimentally tractable organisms. The Sleeping Beauty transposon system has been used extensively as an
insertional tag for identifying cancer genes.
The Tc1/mariner-class of
TEs Sleeping Beauty transposon system, awarded Molecule of the Year in 2009, is active in mammalian cells
and is being investigated for use in human gene
therapy.
TEs are used for the
reconstruction of phylogenies by the means of presence/absence analyses.
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