P instability factor: An active maize transposon system associated with the amplification of Tourist-like MITEs and a new superfamily of transposases
- Xiaoyu Zhang*,
- Cédric Feschotte*,
- Qiang Zhang*,†,
- Ning Jiang*,
- William B. Eggleston‡, and
- Susan R. Wessler*,§
- *Botany Department, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602; and ‡Department of Biology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA 23284
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Contributed by Susan R. Wessler
Abstract
Miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements (MITEs) are widespread and abundant in both plant and animal genomes. Despite the discovery and characterization of many MITE families, their origin and transposition mechanism are still poorly understood, largely because MITEs are nonautonomous elements with no coding capacity. The starting point for this study was P instability factor (PIF), an active DNA transposable element family from maize that was first identified following multiple mutagenic insertions into exactly the same site in intron 2 of the maize anthocyanin regulatory gene R. In this study we report the isolation of a maize Tourist-like MITE family called miniature PIF (mPIF) that shares several features with PIF elements, including identical terminal inverted repeats, similar subterminal sequences, and an unusual but striking preference for an extended 9-bp target site. These shared features indicate that mPIF and PIF elements were amplified by the same or a closely related transposase. This transposase was identified through the isolation of several PIF elements and the identification of one element (called PIFa) that cosegregated with PIF activity. PIFa encodes a putative protein with homologs in Arabidopsis, rice, sorghum, nematodes, and a fungus. Our data suggest that PIFa and these PIF-like elements belong to a new eukaryotic DNA transposon superfamily that is distantly related to the bacterial IS5 group and are responsible for the origin and spread of Tourist-like MITEs.
Footnotes
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↵ † Present address: Monsanto-Dekalb Mystic Research, Mystic, CT 06355.
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↵ § To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: sue{at}dogwood.botany.uga.edu.
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Data deposition: The sequences reported in this paper have been deposited in the GenBank database (accession nos. AF412282 and AF416298–AF416329).
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See commentary on page 12315.
- Abbreviations:
- MITE,
- miniature inverted-repeat transposable element;
- TE,
- transposable element;
- TD,
- transposon display;
- TIRs,
- terminal inverted repeats;
- TSD,
- target site duplication
- Copyright © 2001, The National Academy of Sciences





