Excision and reinsertion of Ac macrotransposons in maize

Author:

Wang Dafang1ORCID,Yu Chuanhe2ORCID,Zhang Jianbo3ORCID,Peterson Thomas45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Math and Sciences, Delta State University , Cleveland, MS 38733-0001, USA

2. The Hormel Institute, University of Minnesota , Austin, MN 55912, USA

3. Department of Horticultural Science, Mountain Horticultural Crops Research and Extension Center, North Carolina State University , Mills River, NC 28759, USA

4. Department of Genetics, Development and Cell Biology, Iowa State University , Ames, IA 50011-3260, USA

5. Department of Agronomy, Iowa State University , Ames, IA 50011-3260, USA

Abstract

Abstract Eukaryotic Macrotransposons (MTns) can be formed by 2 nearby elements flanking a segment of host DNA. The maize Ac transposon can form Ac::MTns, but little is known about Ac::MTn transposition activities. Here, we studied 3 Ac::MTns at the maize p1 locus, each of which is composed of a segment of maize p1 genomic DNA (up to 15 kb) bounded by a fractured Ac element (fAc, 2039 bp), and a full-length Ac element in direct orientation. The resulting Ac::MTns are of 16, 16.5, and 22 kb total length. From these 3 Ac::MTns, we identified 10 independent cases of macrotransposition, and observed similar features of transposition between Ac::MTn and standard Ac/Ds, including characteristic excision footprints and insertion target site duplications. Nine out of the 10 Ac::MTn reinsertion targets were genetically linked to the donor sites, another similarity with Ac/Ds standard transposition. We also identified a MTn-like structure in the maize B73 reference genome and 5 NAM founder lines. The MTn in diverse lines is flanked by target site duplications, confirming the historic occurrence of MTn transposition during genome evolution. Our results show that Ac::MTns are capable of mobilizing segments of DNA long enough to include a typical full-length plant gene and in theory could erode gene colinearity in syntenic regions during plant genome evolution.

Funder

USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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