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    Transcriptional activity of repetitive DNA families in the beetle Tribolium castaneum

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    Satellite DNAs are tandemly repeated sequences clustered within heterochromatin. However, in some cases such as the major TCAST1 satellite DNA from the beetle Tribolium castaneum, they are found partially dispersed within euchromatin. Such organization together with transcriptional activity enables TCAST1 to modulate the activity of neighbouring genes and plays a role in heterochromatin remodelling during development and environmental stress response. In order to explore if other T. castaneum repetitive families have features which could provide them with a possible gene-modulatory role we analyse here transcription activity of ten distinct TCAST families. Transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) was performed on total RNA extracted from adult T. castaneum grown at 25°C as well as from adults subjected to 24 h heat stress at 42°C, with 30 min and 1 h of recovery, respectively. For oocytes and embryos we used publicly available dataset (SRA accession number: SRP050428). After sequencing, adapters and low quality reads were removed and mapped using Bowtie2 to dimers of repetitive families. Normalization method used was fragments per kb of transcript per million mapped reads (FPKM) which we calculated manually. Results from RNA-seq were confirmed by qPCR. Our study reveals that low copy TCAST repetitive families, partially dispersed within euchromatin, are transcribed. Their transcriptional activity is increased after heat stress and differs among stages of embryogenesis
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