TY - JOUR
T1 - Distribution and evolutionary dynamics of Stowaway Miniature Inverted repeat Transposable Elements (MITEs) in grasses
AU - Minaya, Miguel
AU - Pimentel, Manuel
AU - Mason-Gamer, Roberta
AU - Catalan, Pilar
N1 - Funding Information:
Elizabeth Kellogg, Lynn Clark, Lynn Gillespie and Jeff Saarela provided grass materials and DNA samples for us. We thank Majid Sharifi, Pedro Torrecilla, Diane McCarthy, Michael Jorgensen, Mira Markova, and Brandon Fonnemann for their advice with the β-amylase cloning and sequencing, Emily Lemonds for linguistic assistance, and an anonymous reviewer for valuable comments to an earlier version of the manuscript. The work was supported by two consecutive Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation research grant projects CGL2006-00319 and CGL2009-12955-C02-01. M.M. was funded by a Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation PhD FPI fellowship. MP acknowledges a Galician Government postdoctoral contract (Ángeles Alvariño program). Phylogenetic analyses were conducted at the cluster computer system of the BIFI Research Institute (University of Zaragoza, Spain).
PY - 2013/7
Y1 - 2013/7
N2 - •The occurrence of Stowaway MITEs is described within the grass family.•A Poaceae organismal tree was used to analyze their evolutionary dynamics.•Stowaway MITEs were found in the fourth intron of the β-amylase gene.•Similar MITEs were also found in other nuclear genes in the BEP clade.•We hypothesize successive acquisitions, losses and HGT of MITEs in grasses. The occurrence of Stowaway MITEs and their potential footprints in the grasses was assessed within an explicit phylogenetic framework. An organismal tree was used to analyze the distribution and evolutionary dynamics of these elements and their potential excision footprints in the fourth intron of the β-amylase gene and in other introns of several nuclear genes across the Poaceae. Megablast and discontiguous megablast searches in the Entrez nucleotide database were performed for the β-amylase, blz-1, dmc1, nuc, and xly genes MITEs. These elements and their potential footprints were distributed in introns and intergenic spacers of many other nuclear genes throughout the BEP lineages; however, they were absent in the studied PACCMAD lineages.A plausible underlying dynamic of successive acquisitions and deletions of β-amylase Stowaway MITEs in the temperate grasses could be explained by three alternative hypotheses: (i) a single early acquisition of a palindrome element, similar to Tc1-Mariner, in the fourth intron of the β-amylase gene in the ancestor of the Pooideae, followed by multiple independent losses, (ii) multiple independent acquisitions of MITEs in non-related pooid lineages or (iii) different waves of acquisition of MITEs, followed by multiple losses and horizontal transfers in the temperate grasses. This last hypothesis seems to fit best with the evidence found to date.
AB - •The occurrence of Stowaway MITEs is described within the grass family.•A Poaceae organismal tree was used to analyze their evolutionary dynamics.•Stowaway MITEs were found in the fourth intron of the β-amylase gene.•Similar MITEs were also found in other nuclear genes in the BEP clade.•We hypothesize successive acquisitions, losses and HGT of MITEs in grasses. The occurrence of Stowaway MITEs and their potential footprints in the grasses was assessed within an explicit phylogenetic framework. An organismal tree was used to analyze the distribution and evolutionary dynamics of these elements and their potential excision footprints in the fourth intron of the β-amylase gene and in other introns of several nuclear genes across the Poaceae. Megablast and discontiguous megablast searches in the Entrez nucleotide database were performed for the β-amylase, blz-1, dmc1, nuc, and xly genes MITEs. These elements and their potential footprints were distributed in introns and intergenic spacers of many other nuclear genes throughout the BEP lineages; however, they were absent in the studied PACCMAD lineages.A plausible underlying dynamic of successive acquisitions and deletions of β-amylase Stowaway MITEs in the temperate grasses could be explained by three alternative hypotheses: (i) a single early acquisition of a palindrome element, similar to Tc1-Mariner, in the fourth intron of the β-amylase gene in the ancestor of the Pooideae, followed by multiple independent losses, (ii) multiple independent acquisitions of MITEs in non-related pooid lineages or (iii) different waves of acquisition of MITEs, followed by multiple losses and horizontal transfers in the temperate grasses. This last hypothesis seems to fit best with the evidence found to date.
KW - BEP and PACCMAD clades
KW - Beta amylase
KW - MITEs
KW - Poaceae
KW - Temperate grasses
KW - Transposable elements
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84876725633
U2 - 10.1016/j.ympev.2013.03.005
DO - 10.1016/j.ympev.2013.03.005
M3 - Article
C2 - 23511216
AN - SCOPUS:84876725633
SN - 1055-7903
VL - 68
SP - 106
EP - 118
JO - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
IS - 1
ER -