AI Article Synopsis

  • CACTA transposable elements (TEs) are a prevalent type of Class 2 transposons found in various species, but their diversity is not well-documented outside a few model organisms, prompting this study on Chenopodium species.
  • This research identified structural variability of CACTA elements in 22 species of Chenopodium album, noting coexistence of different subtypes, conserved protein domains, captured gene fragments linked to flower development, and specific satellite DNA arrays.
  • The findings suggest that while basic CACTA structures are maintained, significant genetic additions occur, influencing their evolutionary roles and potential functions within the genomes of these plant species.

Article Abstract

Background: CACTA transposable elements (TEs) comprise one of the most abundant superfamilies of Class 2 (cut-and-paste) transposons. Over recent decades, CACTA elements were widely identified in species from the plant, fungi, and animal kingdoms, but sufficiently studied in the genomes of only a few model species although non-model genomes can bring additional and valuable information. It primarily concerned the genomes of species belonging to clades in the base of large taxonomic groups whose genomes, to a certain extent, can preserve relict and/or possesses specific traits. Thus, we sought to investigate the genomes of Chenopodium (Amaranthaceae, Caryophyllales) species to unravel the structural variability of CACTA elements. Caryophyllales is a separate branch of Angiosperms and until recently the diversity of CACTA elements in this clade was unknown.

Results: Application of the short-read genome assembly algorithm followed by analysis of detected complete CACTA elements allowed for the determination of their structural diversity in the genomes of 22 Chenopodium album aggregate species. This approach yielded knowledge regarding: (i) the coexistence of two CACTA transposons subtypes in single genome; (ii) gaining of additional protein conserved domains within the coding sequence; (iii) the presence of captured gene fragments, including key genes for flower development; and (iv)) identification of captured satDNA arrays. Wide comparative database analysis revealed that identified events are scattered through Angiosperms in different proportions.

Conclusions: Our study demonstrated that while preserving the basic element structure a wide range of coding and non-coding additions to CACTA transposons occur in the genomes of C. album aggregate species. Ability to relocate additions inside genome in combination with the proposed novel functional features of structural-different CACTA elements can impact evolutionary trajectory of the host genome.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8978399PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13100-022-00265-3DOI Listing

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