22 research outputs found

    A survey of transposable element classification systems--a call for a fundamental update to meet the challenge of their diversity and complexity.

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    The increase of publicly available sequencing data has allowed for rapid progress in our understanding of genome composition. As new information becomes available we should constantly be updating and reanalyzing existing and newly acquired data. In this report we focus on transposable elements (TEs) which make up a significant portion of nearly all sequenced genomes. Our ability to accurately identify and classify these sequences is critical to understanding their impact on host genomes. At the same time, as we demonstrate in this report, problems with existing classification schemes have led to significant misunderstandings of the evolution of both TE sequences and their host genomes. In a pioneering publication Finnegan (1989) proposed classifying all TE sequences into two classes based on transposition mechanisms and structural features: the retrotransposons (class I) and the DNA transposons (class II). We have retraced how ideas regarding TE classification and annotation in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic scientific communities have changed over time. This has led us to observe that: (1) a number of TEs have convergent structural features and/or transposition mechanisms that have led to misleading conclusions regarding their classification, (2) the evolution of TEs is similar to that of viruses by having several unrelated origins, (3) there might be at least 8 classes and 12 orders of TEs including 10 novel orders. In an effort to address these classification issues we propose: (1) the outline of a universal TE classification, (2) a set of methods and classification rules that could be used by all scientific communities involved in the study of TEs, and (3) a 5-year schedule for the establishment of an International Committee for Taxonomy of Transposable Elements (ICTTE)

    Imperfection works: Survival, transmission and persistence in the system of Heliothis virescens ascovirus 3h (HvAV-3h), Microplitis similis and Spodoptera exigua

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    Ascoviruses are insect-specific large DNA viruses that mainly infect noctuid larvae, and are transmitted by parasitoids in the fields. Heliothis virescens ascovirus 3h (HvAV-3h) has been recently isolated from Spodoptera exigua, without parasitoid vector identified previously. Here we report that Microplitis similis, a solitary endoparasitoid wasp, could transmit HvAV-3h between S. exigua larvae in the laboratory. When the female parasitoid wasp acquired the virus and served as a vector, the period of virion viability on the ovipositor was 4.1 ± 1.4 days. Infected host larvae were still acceptable for egg laying by parasitoids, and the parasitoids thereafter transmitted virus to healthy hosts. Virus acquisition occurred only from donor hosts between 3 and 9 days post infection. The peak of virus acquisition (80.9 ± 6.3%) was found when M. similis wasps oviposited in larvae that had been inoculated with the virus 7 days previously. When virus infection of the host took place during the life cycle of the parasitoid wasp, it caused 1- to 4-day-old immature parasitoids death in the host, whilst a small proportion of 5- to 6-day-old and the majority of 7-day-old parasitoids larvae survived from the virus-infected hosts. Viral contamination did not reduce the life span or fecundity of female M. similis

    Using cDNA and genomic sequences as tools to develop SNP strategies in cassava (Manihot esculenta Crantz)

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    Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) are the most abundant type of DNA polymorphism found in animal and plant genomes. They provide an important new source of molecular markers that are useful in genetic mapping, map based positional cloning, quantitative trait locus mapping and the assessment of genetic distances between individuals. Very little is known on the frequency of SNPs in cassava. We have exploited the recently developed collection of cassava expressed sequence tags (ESTs) to detect SNPs in the five cultivars of cassava used to generate the sequences. The frequency of intra cultivar and inter cultivar SNPs after analysis of 111 contigs was one polymorphism per 905 and one per 1,032 bp, respectively; totaling 1 each 509 bp. We have obtained further information on the frequency of SNPs in six cassava cultivars by analysis of 33 amplicons obtained from 3' EST and BAC end sequences. Overall, about 11 kb of DNA sequence was obtained for each cultivar. A total of 186 SNPs (136 and 50 from ESTs and BAC ends, respectively) were identified. Among these, 146 were intra-cultivar polymorphisms, while 80 were inter-cultivar polymorphisms. Thus the total frequency of SNPs was one per 62 bp. This information will help to develop new strategies for EST mapping as well as their association with phenotypic characteristics

    Gene expression profile in response to Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. manihotis infection in cassava using a cDNA microarray

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    A cassava cDNA microarray based on a large cassava EST database was constructed and used to study theincompatible interaction between cassava andXanthomonas axonopodispv. manihotis(Xam) strain CIO151.For microarray construction, 5700 clones from the cassava unigene set were amplified by polymerase chainreaction (PCR) and printed on glass slides. Microarray hybridization was performed using cDNA fromcassava plants (resistant variety MBra685) collected at 12, 24, 48 h and 7 and 15 days post-infection astreatment and cDNA from mock-inoculated plants as control. A total of 199 genes were found to be differ-entially expressed (126 up-regulated and 73 down-regulated). A greater proportion of differentially-expressedgenes was observed at 7 days after inoculation. Expression profiling and cluster analyses indicate that, inresponse to inoculation withXam, cassava induces dozens of genes, including principally those involved inoxidative burst, protein degradation and pathogenesis-related (PR) genes. In contrast, genes encoding pro-teins that are involved in photosynthesis and metabolism were down regulated. In addition, various othergenes encoding proteins with unknown function or showing no similarity to other proteins were also induced.Quantitative real time PCR experiments confirmed the reliability of our microarray data. In addition weshowed that some genes are induced more rapidly in the resistant than in the susceptible cultivar

    A unigene catalogue of 5700 expressed genes in cassava

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    Two economically important characters, starch content and cassava bacterial blight resistance, were targeted to generate a large collection of cassava ESTs. Two libraries were constructed from cassava root tissues of varieties with high and low starch contents. Other libraries were constructed from plant tissues challenged by the pathogen Xanthomonas axonopodis pv.manihotis. We report here the single pass sequencing of 11 954 cDNA clones from the 5' ends, including 111 from the 3' ends. Cluster analysis permitted the identification of a unigene set of 5700 sequences. Sequence analyses permitted the assignment of a putative functional category for 37% of sequences whereas ~ 16% sequences did not show any significant similarity with other proteins present in the database and therefore can be considered as cassava specific genes. A group of genes belonging to a large multigene family was identified. We characterize a set of genes detected only in infected libraries putatively involved in the defense response to pathogen infection. By comparing two libraries obtained from cultivars contrasting in their starch content a group of genes associated to starch biosynthesis and differentially expressed was identified. This is the first large cassava EST resource developed today and publicly available thus making a significant contribution to genomic knowledge of cassava
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