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JUMPING GENES
ATLANTA - Mariner transposable elements, more popularly
known as jumping genes, appear to jump from species to species,
not randomly but as a fundamental means of survival, reported
University of Illinois researchers at the annual meeting of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Transposable elements are fragments of DNA which appear to
migrate from species to species by an as yet little understood
mechanism through a process known as horizontal transfer. Mariner
elements, which have been identified in many different species of
insects are among the smallest of the jumping genes so far
identified.
Mariner transposable element were first identified in
Drosophila maurintiana, a fly native to the Indian Ocean region.
University of Illinois entomologist Hugh Robertson has
identified other mariner elements in more than 400 arthropod
species. One of the most unusual discoveries was a jump of a
mariner element between an African malaria-vector mosquito and a
green lacewing, which are members of two different orders of
insects.
The mariner element is a DNA sequence about 1,300 base pairs
long. It is characterized by short inverted terminal repeat
sequences with a single gene between them. Robertson believes
that gene encodes a single protein that binds the inverted
terminal repeats and then physically moves the element as a DNA
molecule. The mariner elements cannot jump without this enzyme,
he says.
Robertson uses many molecular biology techniques in his work
including (polymerase chain
reaction) and DNA cloning. His most recent studies indicate that
only two base pairs of the 1,044 total pairs were different in
the central gene of the mariners in the mosquito and the
lacewing.
"We've begun to realize that the evolutionary patterns of the
elements made no sense in terms of the evolutionary history of
the hosts, implying they are jumping around, that there are
horizontal transfers occurring." It has become more and more
clear that many jumps have occurred in recent evolutionary
time," Robertson said in an interview.
While it is now clear that these DNA fragments migrate
across species, the method by which they do this remains a
mystery. One hypothesis is that environmental factors are
responsible, such as mites carrying blood from one creature to
another, or that random DNA molecules are picked up as part of
everyday life.
"Our impression from our data is that the evolutionary fate
of these transposable elements within any particular host is that
they eventually will die by mutation and become non-functional.
By jumping to a new host, they get a new lease on life before
dying out in the old host. Horizontal transfer perhaps explains
both the persistence of these elements in evolutionary time and
the diversity of hosts that they are found in. Practically every
time we find a transposable element in a particular species, the
closest relative of the transposable element will be found in a
completely unrelated insect," noted Robertson.
A better understanding of transposable elements could have
ramifications not only for entomology but for genetic engineering
as well, says Robertson:
"There is a practical importance in that we hope to find an
isolate, active versions of these elements, in all sorts of
different insects, particularly those with economic and medical
importance. For basic research, we want to find out how genes
work. One of the major interests in entomology is to develop
transposable elements such as mariners as tools that can be used
to modify other insects. We want to be able to genetically
manipulate mosquitoes, beetles, moths and mites, for example, for
both agricultural and medical interests."
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