Utilisateur
A DNA sequence that can move to a new location in the genome
Barbara McClintock
No, they are found in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes
One TE-specific protein
Host-cell proteins
By copy and paste
An RNA intermediate
A cDNA intermediate
Reverse transcriptase
Original TE DNA → transcription → RNA intermediate → reverse transcription → cDNA → insertion at a new location while the original copy remains
The original TE stays and a new copy is added elsewhere
Alu
By cut and paste
A DNA intermediate
Original TE DNA → excision of TE DNA → movement of TE DNA → insertion at a new location
The TE is gone from the original location
HDR
The TE can still be present at the original location
About 54%
Between genes and in introns
Yes
Some people have the insertion and some do not
They consume cellular resources
They require transcription, protein production, and DNA replication
They can insert into or disrupt genes
To reduce TE mobilization and prevent mutation
They provide repeated sequences that can promote NAHR
Hosts recruit them for useful functions such as immune-system rearrangements and telomere biology
A TE insertion can create new splice patterns or new transcript forms
They can bring or change regulatory sequences that affect transcription
TE-associated overproduction of antibacterial proteins
They are turned off
It increases genomic variation that may help adaptation
They can move enhancers away from promoters and move genes apart
It can prevent epigenetic marks from interfering with neighboring genes
They use resources, can insert into genes, and can promote NAHR-based mutations
They can be recruited for host functions and can facilitate evolution by changing splicing, gene expression, and genome organization
The end-replication problem of linear chromosomes
Regular DNA polymerases cannot fully replicate the ends of linear chromosomes
It acts as sacrificial DNA at chromosome ends so important genes are not lost first
Telomerase
RNA and protein
An RNA-dependent DNA polymerase
It uses its own RNA as a template to extend telomere DNA at the 3′ end
TTAGGG
Telomerase, transposable-element systems, and ALT
Some plants such as onions and some animals such as Drosophila
Class I TEs transpose onto chromosome ends
Alternative lengthening of telomeres
A short telomere uses telomere DNA from another chromosome as a template through DNA repair and DNA polymerases
They buffer chromosome ends from sequence loss and prevent chromosome ends from being mistaken for broken DNA
More telomere loss, more aneuploidy, and more end-to-end chromosome fusions
NHEJ treats chromosome ends without telomeres like DNA breaks and joins them
Embryonic cells, germline cells, and some stem cells
Telomeres shorten with division and cells eventually become senescent
Without telomerase, repeated cell division shortens telomeres until checkpoints stop proliferation
To maintain telomeres and become immortal
They can select for cancer cells that use ALT
Older people tend to have shorter telomeres
They impair telomerase function and accelerate telomere-related cell limits
