L1 elements are retrotransposons currently active in mammals. Although L1s are typically silenced in most normal tissues, elevated L1 expression is associated with a variety of conditions, including cancer, aging, infertility and neurological disease. These associations have raised interest in the mapping of human endogenous de novo L1 insertions, and a variety of methods have been developed for this purpose. Adapting these methods to mouse genomes would allow us to monitor endogenous in vivo L1 activity in controlled, experimental conditions using mouse disease models. Here, we use a modified version of transposon insertion profiling, called nanoTIPseq, to selectively enrich young mouse L1s. By linking this amplification step with nanopore sequencing, we identified >95% annotated L1s from C57BL/6 genomic DNA using only 200 000 sequencing reads. In the process, we discovered 82 unannotated L1 insertions from a single C57BL/6 genome. Most of these unannotated L1s were near repetitive sequence and were not found with short-read TIPseq. We used nanoTIPseq on individual mouse breast cancer cells and were able to identify the annotated and unannotated L1s, as well as new insertions specific to individual cells, providing proof of principle for using nanoTIPseq to interrogate retrotransposition activity at the single-cell level in vivo.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkae273 | DOI Listing |
Nucleic Acids Res
May 2024
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, LA 70112, USA.
L1 elements are retrotransposons currently active in mammals. Although L1s are typically silenced in most normal tissues, elevated L1 expression is associated with a variety of conditions, including cancer, aging, infertility and neurological disease. These associations have raised interest in the mapping of human endogenous de novo L1 insertions, and a variety of methods have been developed for this purpose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFL1 elements are retrotransposons currently active in mammals. Although L1s are typically silenced in most normal tissues, elevated L1 expression is associated with a variety of conditions, including cancer, aging, infertility, and neurological disease. These associations have raised interest in the mapping of human endogenous L1 insertions, and a variety of methods have been developed for this purpose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
October 2023
Division of Genetics and Genomics, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Transposon-derived transcripts are abundant in RNA sequences, yet their landscape and function, especially for fusion transcripts derived from unannotated or somatically acquired transposons, remains underexplored. Here, we developed a new bioinformatic tool to detect transposon-fusion transcripts in RNA-sequencing data and performed a pan-cancer analysis of 10,257 cancer samples across 34 cancer types as well as 3,088 normal tissue samples. We identified 52,277 cancer-specific fusions with ~30 events per cancer and hotspot loci within transposons vulnerable to fusion formation.
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