Publication | Open Access
FA-SAT Is an Old Satellite DNA Frozen in Several Bilateria Genomes
38
Citations
55
References
2017
Year
GeneticsMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsDna SequencesGenomicsPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyGenome AnalysisTandem Repeat SequencesDna SequencingGenome StructureDna ReplicationGenetic VariationSeveral Bilateria GenomesFunctional GenomicsBioinformaticsBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyGenome SequencingDark MatterReference GenomeMedicineSequence Assembly
In recent years, a growing body of evidence has recognized the tandem repeat sequences, and specifically satellite DNA, as a functional class of sequences in the genomic "dark matter." Using an original, complementary, and thus an eclectic experimental design, we show that the cat archetypal satellite DNA sequence, FA-SAT, is "frozen" conservatively in several Bilateria genomes. We found different genomic FA-SAT architectures, and the interspersion pattern was conserved. In Carnivora genomes, the FA-SAT-related sequences are also amplified, with the predominance of a specific FA-SAT variant, at the heterochromatic regions. We inspected the cat genome project to locate FA-SAT array flanking regions and revealed an intensive intermingling with transposable elements. Our results also show that FA-SAT-related sequences are transcribed and that the most abundant FA-SAT variant is not always the most transcribed. We thus conclude that the DNA sequences of FA-SAT and their transcripts are "frozen" in these genomes. Future work is needed to disclose any putative function that these sequences may play in these genomes.
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