Publication | Open Access
New Superfamilies of Eukaryotic DNA Transposons and Their Internal Divisions
69
Citations
17
References
2009
Year
Dna TransposonsComparative GenomicsGeneticsMolecular BiologyNew SuperfamiliesMolecular GeneticsGenomicsTpase BelongingMolecular EcologyGene StructureGenome AnalysisGenome StructureDna ReplicationNuclear OrganizationBacterial TransposonChromosomal RearrangementBioinformaticsFunctional GenomicsBiologyChromatinNatural SciencesGenome SequencingMicrobiologyMedicine
Despite their enormous diversity and abundance, all currently known eukaryotic DNA transposons belong to only 15 superfamilies. Here, we report two new superfamilies of DNA transposons, named Sola and Zator. Sola transposons encode DDD-transposases (transposase, TPase) and are flanked by 4-bp target site duplications (TSD). Elements from the Sola superfamily are distributed in a variety of species including bacteria, protists, plants, and metazoans. They can be divided into three distinct groups of elements named Sola1, Sola2, and Sola3. The elements from each group have extremely low sequence identity to each other, different termini, and different target site preferences. However, all three groups belong to a single superfamily based on significant PSI-Blast identities between their TPases. The DDD TPase sequences encoded by Sola transposons are not similar to any known TPases. The second superfamily named Zator is characterized by 3-bp TSD. The Zator superfamily is relatively rare in eukaryotic species, and it evolved from a bacterial transposon encoding a TPase belonging to the "transposase 36" family (Pfam07592). These transposons are named TP36 elements (abbreviated from transposase 36).
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