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maT and mosquito transposons in cnidarians: evolutionary history and intraspecific differences. / Puzakov, Mikhail V; Puzakova, Lyudmila V; Shi, Shasha et al.

In: Functional & integrative genomics, Vol. 23, No. 3, 244, 16.07.2023.

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Puzakov MV, Puzakova LV, Shi S, Cheresiz SV. maT and mosquito transposons in cnidarians: evolutionary history and intraspecific differences. Functional & integrative genomics. 2023 Jul 16;23(3):244. doi: 10.1007/s10142-023-01175-0

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Puzakov, Mikhail V ; Puzakova, Lyudmila V ; Shi, Shasha et al. / maT and mosquito transposons in cnidarians: evolutionary history and intraspecific differences. In: Functional & integrative genomics. 2023 ; Vol. 23, No. 3.

BibTeX

@article{553d06048de24b28ac0bc4fc6f137f10,
title = "maT and mosquito transposons in cnidarians: evolutionary history and intraspecific differences",
abstract = "Transposable elements exert a significant effect on the size and structure of eukaryotic genomes. Tc1/mariner superfamily elements represent the widely distributed and highly variable group of DNA transposons. Tc1/mariner elements include TLE/DD34-38E, MLE/DD34D, maT/DD37D, Visitor/DD41D, Guest/DD39D, mosquito/DD37E, and L18/DD37E families, all of which are well or less scarcely studied. However, more detailed research into the patterns of prevalence and diversity of Tc1/mariner transposons enables one to better understand the coevolution of the TEs and the eukaryotic genomes. We performed a detailed analysis of the maT/DD37D family in Cnidaria. The study of 77 genomic assemblies demonstrated that maT transposons are found in a limited number of cnidarian species belonging to classes Cubozoa (1 species), Hydrozoa (3 species) и Scyphozoa (5 species) only. The identified TEs were classified into 5 clades, with the representatives from Pelagiidae (class Scyphozoa) forming a separate clade of maT transposons, which has never been described previously. The potentially functional copies of maT transposons were identified in the hydrae. The phylogenetic analysis and the studies of distribution among the taxons and the evolutionary dynamics of the elements suggest that maT transposons of the cnidarians are the descendants of several independent invasion events occurring at different periods of time. We also established that the TEs of mosquito/DD37E family are found in Hydridae (class Hydrozoa) only. A comparison of maT and mosquito prevalence in two genomic assemblies of Hydra viridissima revealed obvious differences, thus demonstrating that each individual organism might carry a unique mobilome pattern. The results of the presented research make us better understand the diversity and evolution of Tc1/mariner transposons and their effect on the eukaryotic genomes.",
keywords = "Cnidaria, DNA transposons, Genome evolution, Tc1/mariner, maT, mosquito",
author = "Puzakov, {Mikhail V} and Puzakova, {Lyudmila V} and Shasha Shi and Cheresiz, {Sergey V}",
note = "This research was funded by grants from the Russian Academy of Sciences (121041400077-1) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31671313). {\textcopyright} 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.",
year = "2023",
month = jul,
day = "16",
doi = "10.1007/s10142-023-01175-0",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
journal = "Functional & integrative genomics",
issn = "1438-793X",
publisher = "Springer Berlin",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - maT and mosquito transposons in cnidarians: evolutionary history and intraspecific differences

AU - Puzakov, Mikhail V

AU - Puzakova, Lyudmila V

AU - Shi, Shasha

AU - Cheresiz, Sergey V

N1 - This research was funded by grants from the Russian Academy of Sciences (121041400077-1) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31671313). © 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

PY - 2023/7/16

Y1 - 2023/7/16

N2 - Transposable elements exert a significant effect on the size and structure of eukaryotic genomes. Tc1/mariner superfamily elements represent the widely distributed and highly variable group of DNA transposons. Tc1/mariner elements include TLE/DD34-38E, MLE/DD34D, maT/DD37D, Visitor/DD41D, Guest/DD39D, mosquito/DD37E, and L18/DD37E families, all of which are well or less scarcely studied. However, more detailed research into the patterns of prevalence and diversity of Tc1/mariner transposons enables one to better understand the coevolution of the TEs and the eukaryotic genomes. We performed a detailed analysis of the maT/DD37D family in Cnidaria. The study of 77 genomic assemblies demonstrated that maT transposons are found in a limited number of cnidarian species belonging to classes Cubozoa (1 species), Hydrozoa (3 species) и Scyphozoa (5 species) only. The identified TEs were classified into 5 clades, with the representatives from Pelagiidae (class Scyphozoa) forming a separate clade of maT transposons, which has never been described previously. The potentially functional copies of maT transposons were identified in the hydrae. The phylogenetic analysis and the studies of distribution among the taxons and the evolutionary dynamics of the elements suggest that maT transposons of the cnidarians are the descendants of several independent invasion events occurring at different periods of time. We also established that the TEs of mosquito/DD37E family are found in Hydridae (class Hydrozoa) only. A comparison of maT and mosquito prevalence in two genomic assemblies of Hydra viridissima revealed obvious differences, thus demonstrating that each individual organism might carry a unique mobilome pattern. The results of the presented research make us better understand the diversity and evolution of Tc1/mariner transposons and their effect on the eukaryotic genomes.

AB - Transposable elements exert a significant effect on the size and structure of eukaryotic genomes. Tc1/mariner superfamily elements represent the widely distributed and highly variable group of DNA transposons. Tc1/mariner elements include TLE/DD34-38E, MLE/DD34D, maT/DD37D, Visitor/DD41D, Guest/DD39D, mosquito/DD37E, and L18/DD37E families, all of which are well or less scarcely studied. However, more detailed research into the patterns of prevalence and diversity of Tc1/mariner transposons enables one to better understand the coevolution of the TEs and the eukaryotic genomes. We performed a detailed analysis of the maT/DD37D family in Cnidaria. The study of 77 genomic assemblies demonstrated that maT transposons are found in a limited number of cnidarian species belonging to classes Cubozoa (1 species), Hydrozoa (3 species) и Scyphozoa (5 species) only. The identified TEs were classified into 5 clades, with the representatives from Pelagiidae (class Scyphozoa) forming a separate clade of maT transposons, which has never been described previously. The potentially functional copies of maT transposons were identified in the hydrae. The phylogenetic analysis and the studies of distribution among the taxons and the evolutionary dynamics of the elements suggest that maT transposons of the cnidarians are the descendants of several independent invasion events occurring at different periods of time. We also established that the TEs of mosquito/DD37E family are found in Hydridae (class Hydrozoa) only. A comparison of maT and mosquito prevalence in two genomic assemblies of Hydra viridissima revealed obvious differences, thus demonstrating that each individual organism might carry a unique mobilome pattern. The results of the presented research make us better understand the diversity and evolution of Tc1/mariner transposons and their effect on the eukaryotic genomes.

KW - Cnidaria

KW - DNA transposons

KW - Genome evolution

KW - Tc1/mariner

KW - maT

KW - mosquito

UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/display.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85164875016&origin=inward&txGid=d5cd45eae9fccd66357b22e5b573f7ae

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/9fb30cdf-2884-3c24-8f28-40435c6b1865/

U2 - 10.1007/s10142-023-01175-0

DO - 10.1007/s10142-023-01175-0

M3 - Article

C2 - 37454326

VL - 23

JO - Functional & integrative genomics

JF - Functional & integrative genomics

SN - 1438-793X

IS - 3

M1 - 244

ER -

ID: 52600114