mobile dna chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

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Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張張張 張張張張 http://genomed.dlearn.kmu .edu.tw

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Page 1: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Mobile DNA

Chapter 15.

張學偉 助理教授http://genomed.dlearn.kmu.edu.tw

Page 2: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Sub-cellular Genetic Elements as Gene Creatures

• Gene elements: Any molecule or segment of DNA or RNA that carries genetic information and acts as a heritable unit.

• Gene creature: lack their own cells but carry genetic information.

Page 3: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Most moble DNA consists of Transposable Elements.

• Transposable elements

1.Includes: DNA-based transposons and retro-transposons.

2.= transposon [Tn] (usually define the DNA-based Tn)

3.= jumping genes (popular name)

44 jump = transposition

Transposons are scattered throughout the DNA of all forms of life.

Page 4: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-1. Transposable elements are never free.

Tn are always inserted into other DNA molecule.

replicate

Without ori in inserted DNA die

Page 5: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授
Page 6: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• Replicon: A molecule of DNA or RNA that is self-replicating.

= it has its own origin of replication.

example: chromosomes, plasmids, virus genome = replicon

Note: Transposons are not replicon = Transposons lacks of replicaion origin of their own.

Page 7: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• DNA-based Tn:

1.New copy generated

(complex or replicative transposition)

2. Original copy move, leaving a gap in old place.

(conservative or cut-and-paste transposition)

Page 8: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Transposable elements are classified based on their mechanism of movement.

Page 9: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-2.

Essential Components of a Transposon

1 12

Recognize the target sequence (at host)

Tn will often accept a target site with a sequence that is near match to the preferred target sequences.

Due to short length and low specificity, multiple copies of the target sequence will be found almost random.

Page 10: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授
Page 11: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Many larger Tn carry a variety of genes unrelated to transposition itself.

e.g., antibiotic resistence genes,

virulence genes,

metabolic genes

Page 12: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Insertion sequences -the simplest transposons

(20/23match)

Composite Tn

Page 13: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-3 Structure of an insertion sequence. (bacteria, virus, plasmid)

IS jump to new location

Turn off transposition

Frequency of frameshift determine the damage degree of host.

IS contain no genes that provide a convenient phenotype. but cause insertion inactivation of target genes.

Page 14: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-4. Outline of Conservative transposition.

Movement by conservative transposition

= Cut-and-paste

2 ssb ? (start)1 dsb ? (end)

Which it is called “conservative”? because the DNA of the transposon is not altered during move.

It is highly possible that this damaged DNA molecule will not repaired and is doomed.

If repaired, the Tn in new location may still hurt the host.

High freq of transposition severely damage the host chromosome. transposition need tightly regulated.

Page 15: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-5. Movement by Conservative Transposition.

ss overhang

Page 16: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Complex transposons move by replicative transposition.

Page 17: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-6. Outline of Replicative Transposition. = complex Transposition

The original Tn is not damaged.

Page 18: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-7. Components of a complex transposon.

IRS

Although the complex Tn is replicated while moving, they are not replicons, as they have no origin of replication.

Page 19: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-8. Replicative transposition forms a cointegrate.

Cointegrate = Temporary structure formed by linking the strands of two molecules of DNA during transposition, recombination, similar processes.

split

Page 20: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• Replicative and Conservative transposition are related.

similar at mechanistic level.

Page 21: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-9. Replicative and conserative transposition are related.

Common steps

dsb

ssb

3’ end join 5’ target open DNA.3’ end as primers for fill in

Page 22: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授
Page 23: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-10. Principle of the composite transposon. Several posibilies.

Composite Tn = 2 IS surrounding a central block of genes

•Composite transposons

Move independent

composite transposon

Page 24: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-11. Evolution of a composite transposon.

Accumulate on non-essential regions.

This is important if Tn carries internal genes that enhance the survival of the host cell.

In practice, all stages from newly formed to fully fused composite Tn are found in bacteria. laboratory genetic manipulation is easy.

Page 25: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• Transposition may rearrange host DNA

Page 26: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-12. Insertion created by using inside ends to transpose.

Page 27: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-13. Deletions and Inversions made by abortive transposition.

Page 28: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Transposable elements in eukaryotes:

Barbara McClintock (1902-1992)Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, NY

Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine 1983

“for her discovery of mobil genetic elements”

• Studied transposable elements in corn (Zea mays) 1940s-1950s(formerly identified as mutator genes by Marcus Rhoades 1930s)

Nonautonomous DNA tn (Ds) require the activator (Ac) to be in the same cells.

Page 29: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-14. Ac/Ds family of transposons in Maize. Simple & conservative Tn

•Transposons in higher life forms

Fully functional 4500bp

Vary in size and defective (derived from Ac)

NonautonomousAc/Ds don’t need to be on the same chromosome.Ac is autonomous.Ds is non-autonomous.

Page 30: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-15. Movement of Ds element gives mottled corn.

patch

Page 31: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• The most widely distributed Tn in higher organisms are those of the Tc1/mariner family.

• The first member of Tc1 from nematode

and Mariner from fly.

Found in fungi, plants, animals, protozons.

Page 32: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-16. Structure of Ty-1 retrotransposon.

•Retro-Elements Make an RNA copy

= retroposon

Found most often in eukaryotes

Long terminal repeats of retrovirus

Page 33: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-17. Movement of Ty-1 retrotransposon (Tn of yeast 1).

Page 34: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Yayoi culture 彌生文化西元前 250? ~西元 250?年

繼繩紋文化的日本史前文化。原起自九州,後向東北關東平原擴展。彌生時代人開始製作青銅器和鐵器,從事紡織。並利用由中國傳來的水稻種植方法。彌生陶器是未經上釉的。早期彌生陶器的特徵是表面有鏤刻裝飾;中期表面刻有波紋裝飾。類似中國漢代青銅製品有銅鏡和銅錢。

Page 35: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

21% 13%8% 3%

45%25%

Repetitive DNA of Mammals

LINE1 = 5 %

Page 36: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Mobile genetic elements of human (dispersed repeat) included: transposition & retrotransposition:

retrotransposition: moving in the form of RNA by element coding for reverse transcriptase. including:

transposition: moving in the form of DNA by element coding for transposases.

LINEs (Long interspersed nuclear element) SINEs (Short interspersed nuclear element) retrovirus-like elements (e.g,LTR; long terminal repeat)

Page 37: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Figure 9.25

Non-autonomous This refers to the fact that many of the transposable elements are missingsome of the genes required for transposition; however, these elements canstill move because other copies of the element in the genome encodethe necessary gene products.

Page 38: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-18. Structure of LINE-1 (L1) element.

transposase

Most human LINE-1 sequences are defective due to deletion. Lack of LTR

Derived from Poly-A tail

Page 39: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Genetic organization of a typical LINS & SINE [Fig11-34]

LINE promote their own transposition and even transpose cellular RNA

The sequences of LINE and SINE look like simple genes.

Poly-A help generate the primer terminus for RT Any mRNA should be an attractive substrate for transposition via “ target-primed reverse transcription mechanism.

Page 40: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• Very rarely LINE-1 make a new copy of itself and may insert in somewhere in DNA.

genetic diseases.

Page 41: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• Retro-Insertion of Host-Derived DNA

Page 42: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-19. Creation of a processed pseudogene.

complementary

= retro-psuedogene

Page 43: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Processed pseudogenes arise from integration of reverse transcribed mRNA

Page 44: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Evidence:

1. many of the poly-A retrotransposons (LINE & SINE) that have been detected by large-scale genomic sequencing are truncated elelments. most of these are missing region from 5’end. lost the ability to transpose.

2. Processed pseudogenes not expressed by cell due to lack of promoter, intron or truncate near 5’end. (many cellular gene had been truncated at 5’end) these pseudogenes are often flanked by short repeat this is structure of LINE-promoted transpoistion of cellular mRNA.

Page 45: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

SINEs are special class of processed pseudogenes that were original derived from host DNA sequences.

Page 46: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-20. Origin of the Alu element from 7SL RNA.

Derived from 7sl

Non-coding RNA

DR DR

Direct repeat

Page 47: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Repeats such as Alu sequences are collectively called SINE.

Page 48: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• Retrons encode bacterial reverse transcriptase

Page 49: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-21. Structure of a retron and its gene products. (bacterial)

Template & primer

Page 50: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-22. Retron RNA and RNA/DNA hybrid.

Often insert to virus In turn insert to bacterial chromosome

Page 51: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• The Multitude of Transposable Elements.

Conjugative transposons:Both transpose and promote conjugation like fertility plasmids.

Page 52: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• Bacteriophage Mu is a Transposon

[transduction]

Page 53: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-23. Bacteriophage Mu is a transposon.

Page 54: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-24.Conjugative transposon.

•Conjugative Transposons

Page 55: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• Integrons collect genes for transposons

Page 56: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-25. Integrons collect antibiotic resistance genes.

Integration site + intergrase

Page 57: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• selfish DNA: perform no useful function but merely inhabit the chromosome

• Junk DNA: defective selfish DNA {cannot move} , e.g., most of them become defective and lose ability to form virus particle.

Page 58: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-26. Junk DNA is defective selfish DNA.

Page 59: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

• Homing Introns

Page 60: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-27.Homing intron inserts in a unique location.

Page 61: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Fig15-28.Homing Retro-intron inserts via RNA Intermediate.

Page 62: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授
Page 63: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Homologous Recombination (Ch14)

occur between any two highly similar regions of DNA, regardless of the sequence

Site-Specific Recombination (Ch14)

and Transposition of DNA (Ch 15)

SSR occur between two defined sequences elements. Tn occur between one specific seq and non-specific DNA sites.

Page 64: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Three types of CSSR recombination [Fig11-3]

Recognition site

Direct repeat for crossover region

Inverted repeat

Because the crossover region is asymmetric, a given recombination always has a defined polarity IR (inverted repeat) or DR (direct repeat)

Page 65: Mobile DNA Chapter 15. 張學偉 助理教授

Genetic organization of three classes of Tn [Fig11-19]

No IR (inverted repeat)

Other gene

Long terminal repeat

(non-viral retrotransposons)

(untranslated regions)