Publication | Open Access
Several short interspersed repetitive elements (SINEs) in distant species may have originated from a common ancestral retrovirus: characterization of a squid SINE and a possible mechanism for generation of tRNA-derived retroposons.
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Citations
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References
1993
Year
GeneticsMolecular GeneticsGenomicsPhylogenetic AnalysisSequence MotifViral EvolutionPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyHorizontal TransmissionGene StructureRepetitive ElementsVirus PhylogenySquid GenomeSequence AnalysisGenome StructureVirologySquid SineGene EvolutionBioinformaticsCommon Ancestral RetrovirusBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyMedicine
Using labeled transcripts generated in vitro from squid total genomic DNA as a probe, we isolated and characterized a SINE that is present in the squid genome. The squid SINE appears to be derived from a tRNA(Lys). When the consensus sequences of five different SINEs with a tRNA(Lys)-like structure from distantly related species, including squid, were aligned, we found in the tRNA-unrelated region two sequence motifs that were almost identical among these five SINEs. This observation suggests a common evolutionary origin for these SINEs and/or some function(s) for these motifs. Similar sequences were unexpectedly found to be present in sequences complementary to the U5 regions of several mammalian retroviruses whose primer is a tRNA(Lys). On the basis of these findings, we present a model for the generation of SINEs. We propose that they are derived from a "strong-stop DNA" with a primer tRNA(Lys) that is an intermediate in the reverse transcription of certain retroviruses. Our model suggests that a certain group of SINEs may have been generated by horizontal transmission, although it is not clear whether information was transmitted via a similar retrovirus or via an RNA or DNA of a SINE.
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