Phylogenetic relationships of reverse transcriptase and RNase H sequences and aspects of genome structure in the gypsy group of retrotransposons

45Citations
Citations of this article
28Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The gypsy group of long-terminal-repeat retrotransposons contains elements having the same order of enzyme domains in the pol gene as do retroviruses. Elements in the gypsy group are now known from yeast, filamentous fungi, plants, insects, and echinoids. Reverse transcriptase and RNase H amino acid sequences from elements in the gypsy group - including the recently described SURL elements, TED, Cft1, and Ulysses, - were aligned and analyzed by using parsimony and bootstrapping methods, with plant caulimoviruses and/or retroviruses as outgroups. Clades supported at the 95% level after bootstrapping include (1) 17.6 with 297 and (2) all of the SURL elements together. Other likely relationships supported at lower bootstrap confidence intervals include (1) SURL elements with mag, (2) 17.6 and 297 with TED. and this collective group with 412 and gypsy. (3) Tf1 with Cft1, (4) IFG7 with Del, and (5) all of the retrotransposons in the gypsy group together, to the exclusion of Ty3. In contrast with an earlier analysis, our results place mag within the gypsy group rather than outside of a cluster that contains gypsy group retrotransposons and plant caulimoviruses. Several features of retrotransposon genomes provide further support for some of the aforementioned relationships. The union of SURL elements with mag is supported by the presence of two RNA binding sites in the nucleocapsid protein. Location of the tRNA primer binding site and the presence of a long open reading frame 3′ to the pol gene support the 17.6-297-TED-412-gypsy cluster.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Springer, M. S., & Britten, R. J. (1993). Phylogenetic relationships of reverse transcriptase and RNase H sequences and aspects of genome structure in the gypsy group of retrotransposons. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 10(6), 1370–1379. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a040065

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free