Influence of Ty3/gypsy and Ty1/copia LTR-retrotransposons on the large genomes of Alstroemeriaceae: genome landscape of Bomarea edulis (Tussac) Herb.

Protoplasma

Laboratory of Plant Cytogenetics and Evolution, Department of Botany, Biosciences Centre, Federal University of Pernambuco, Recife, PE, 50670-901, Brazil.

Published: January 2025

Repetitive elements are the main components of many plant genomes and play a crucial role in the variation of genome size and structure, ultimately impacting species diversification and adaptation. Alstroemeriaceae exhibits species with large genomes, not attributed to polyploidy. In this study, we analysed the repetitive fraction of the genome of Bomarea edulis through low-coverage sequencing and in silico characterization, and compared it to the repeats of Alstroemeria longistaminea, a species from a sister genus that has been previously characterized. LTR-retrotransposons were identified as the most abundant elements in the B. edulis genome (50.22%), with significant variations in abundance for specific lineages between the two species. The expansion of the B. edulis genome was likely due to three main lineages of LTR retrotransposons, Ty3/gypsy Tekay and Retand and Ty1/copia SIRE, all represented by truncated elements which were probably active in the past. Furthermore, the proportion of satDNA (~ 7%) was six times higher in B. edulis compared to A. longistaminea, with most families exhibiting a dispersed, uniform distribution in the genome. SatDNAs, thus, contributed to some extent to genome obesity. Despite diverging around 29 Mya, both species still share some satDNA families and retrotransposons. However, differences in repeat abundances and sequence variants led to genome differentiation despite their similar sizes and structure.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00709-025-02036-2DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

large genomes
8
genome
8
bomarea edulis
8
edulis genome
8
edulis
5
species
5
influence ty3/gypsy
4
ty3/gypsy ty1/copia
4
ty1/copia ltr-retrotransposons
4
ltr-retrotransposons large
4

Similar Publications

Establishment and application of a zebrafish model of Werner syndrome identifies sapanisertib as a potential antiaging drug.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

February 2025

State Key Laboratory of Genetic Engineering, School of Life Sciences, Liver Cancer Institute of Zhongshan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai 200438, China.

Aging is a complex process that affects multiple organs, and the discovery of a pharmacological approach to ameliorate aging is considered the Holy Grail of medicine. Here, we performed an N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea forward genetic screening in zebrafish and identified an accelerated aging mutant named (), harboring a mutation in the - () gene. Loss of leads to a short lifespan and age-related characteristics in the intestine of zebrafish embryos, such as cellular senescence, genomic instability, and epigenetic alteration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Genome recombination on demand.

Science

January 2025

Department of Genetics, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA.

Large genome rearrangements in mammalian cells can be generated at scale.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We lack tools to edit DNA sequences at scales necessary to study 99% of the human genome that is noncoding. To address this gap, we applied CRISPR prime editing to insert recombination handles into repetitive sequences, up to 1697 per cell line, which enables generating large-scale deletions, inversions, translocations, and circular DNA. Recombinase induction produced more than 100 stochastic megabase-sized rearrangements in each cell.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In 2021, a year before ChatGPT took the world by storm amid the excitement about generative artificial intelligence (AI), AlphaFold 2 cracked the 50-year-old protein-folding problem, predicting three-dimensional (3D) structures for more than 200 million proteins from their amino acid sequences. This accomplishment was a precursor to an unprecedented burgeoning of large language models (LLMs) in the life sciences. That was just the beginning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Systematic bias in malaria parasite relatedness estimation.

G3 (Bethesda)

January 2025

Infectious Disease Epidemiology and Analytics G5 Unit, Institut Pasteur, Université Paris Cité, Paris 75015, France.

Genetic studies of Plasmodium parasites increasingly feature relatedness estimates. However, various aspects of malaria parasite relatedness estimation are not fully understood. For example, relatedness estimates based on whole-genome-sequence (WGS) data often exceed those based on sparser data types.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!