59 research outputs found

    Polycomb Group-Dependent, Heterochromatin Protein 1-Independent, Chromatin Structures Silence Retrotransposons in Somatic Tissues Outside Ovaries

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    Somatic cells are equipped with different silencing mechanisms that protect the genome against retrotransposons. In Drosophila melanogaster, a silencing pathway implicating the argonaute protein PIWI represses retrotransposons in cells surrounding the oocyte, whereas a PIWI-independent pathway is involved in other somatic tissues. Here, we show that these two silencing mechanisms result in distinct chromatin structures. Using sensor transgenes, we found that, in somatic tissues outside of the ovaries, these transgenes adopt a heterochromatic configuration implicating hypermethylation of H3K9 and K27. We identified the Polycomb repressive complexes (PRC1 and 2), but not heterochromatin protein 1 to be necessary factors for silencing. Once established, the compact structure is stably maintained through cell divisions. By contrast, in cells where the silencing is PIWI-dependent, the transgenes display an open and labile chromatin structure. Our data suggest that a post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS) mechanism is responsible for the repression in the ovarian somatic cells, whereas a mechanism that couples PTGS to transcriptional gene silencing operates to silence retrotransposons in the other somatic tissues

    In Drosophila melanogaster the COM Locus Directs the Somatic Silencing of Two Retrotransposons through both Piwi-Dependent and -Independent Pathways

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    BACKGROUND: In the Drosophila germ line, repeat-associated small interfering RNAs (rasiRNAs) ensure genomic stability by silencing endogenous transposable elements. This RNA silencing involves small RNAs of 26-30 nucleotides that are mainly produced from the antisense strand and function through the Piwi protein. Piwi belongs to the subclass of the Argonaute family of RNA interference effector proteins, which are expressed in the germline and in surrounding somatic tissues of the reproductive apparatus. In addition to this germ-line expression, Piwi has also been implicated in diverse functions in somatic cells. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here, we show that two LTR retrotransposons from Drosophila melanogaster, ZAM and Idefix, are silenced by an RNA silencing pathway that has characteristics of the rasiRNA pathway and that specifically recognizes and destroys the sense-strand RNAs of the retrotransposons. This silencing depends on Piwi in the follicle cells surrounding the oocyte. Interestingly, this silencing is active in all the somatic tissues examined from embryos to adult flies. In these somatic cells, while the silencing still involves the strict recognition of sense-strand transcripts, it displays the marked difference of being independent of the Piwi protein. Finally, we present evidence that in all the tissues examined, the repression is controlled by the heterochromatic COM locus. CONCLUSION: Our data shed further light on the silencing mechanism that acts to target Drosophila LTR retrotransposons in somatic cells throughout fly development. They demonstrate that different RNA silencing pathways are involved in ovarian versus other somatic tissues, since Piwi is necessary for silencing in the former tissues but is dispensable in the latter. They further demonstrate that these pathways are controlled by the heterochromatic COM locus which ensures the overall protection of Drosophila against the detrimental effects of random retrotransposon mobilization

    The integration machinery of ZAM, a retroelement from Drosophila melanogaster, acts as a sequence-specific endonuclease.

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    International audienceRetroviruses and retrotransposons insert into the host genome with no obvious sequence specificity. We examined the target sites of the retroelement ZAM by sequencing each host-ZAM junction in the genome of Drosophila melanogaster. Our overall data provide compelling evidence that ZAM integration machinery recognizes and leads to ZAM insertion into the sequence 5'-GCGCGCg-3'. This unique property of ZAM will facilitate the development of new tools to study the integration process of retroelements

    Functional characteristics of a reverse transcriptase encoded by an endogenous retrovirus from Drosophila melanogaster

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    ZAM is an LTR-retrotransposon from Drosophila melanogaster that belongs to the genus errantivirus, viruses similar in structure and replication cycle to vertebrate retroviruses. A key component to its lifecycle is its reverse transcriptase which copies single-stranded genomic RNA into DNA. Here, we provide a detailed characterization of the enzymatic activities of the reverse transcriptase encoded by ZAM. When expressed in vitro, the reverse transcriptase domain associated with the RNase H domain encoded by the ZAM pol gene forms homodimers and displays an efficient RNA-dependent DNA-polymerase activity. It requires either Mg2+ or Mn2+ divalent cations, and works in basic pH, with a peak at around pH9. The so-called [RT-RH] polypeptide displays an optimal activity at 22 degrees C, a property that makes it well-adapted to the temperature of its host. This study contributes to our understanding of the general structures and functions of retroviral reverse transcriptases, a necessary process in the search for novel inhibitors

    Invertebrate retroviruses: ZAM a new candidate in D.melanogaster.

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    ZAM, a new retroelement of Drosophila melanogaster, was identified as a mutational insertion at the white locus. It displays all the structural features of a vertebrate retrovirus. Its three open reading frames encode predicted products resembling the products of the gag, pol and env genes of retroviruses. Its transcription gives rise to an 8.6 kb full-length RNA and a 1.7 kb spliced message for the env gene. The latter encodes an envelope protein that is typical of elements having an extracellular phase of the life cycle. The identification of a ZAM envelope retrogene provides evidence that ZAM is mobilized through a reverse trancriptional process in the germ line of flies. We report that ZAM is distributed differently among D.melanogaster strains. Two stocks out of >15 tested display a ZAM high copy number, with numerous copies distributed on chromosomal arms. This high copy number is associated with a high transcriptional rate of ZAM. The existence of these two categories of strains offers a new genetic system in which the properties of a potential invertebrate retrovirus can be tested

    Mobilization of two retroelements, ZAM and Idefix, in a novel unstable line of Drosophila melanogaster.

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