Background: Transposable elements are selfish genetic sequences which only occasionally provide useful functions to their host species. In addition, models of mobile element evolution assume a second type of selfishness: elements of different familes do not cooperate, but they independently fight for their survival in the host genome. Results: We show that recombination events among distantly related Athila retrotransposons have led to the generation of new Athila lineages. Their pattern of diversification suggests that Athila elements survive in Arabidopsis by a combination of selfish replication and of amplification of highly diverged copies with coding potential. Many Athila elements are non-autonomous but still conserve intact open reading frames which are under the effect of negative, purifying natural selection. Conclusion: The evolution of these mobile elements is far more complex than hitherto assumed. Strict selfish replication does not explain all the patterns observed. © 2008 Marco and Marín; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Marco, A., & Marín, I. (2008). How Athila retrotransposons survive in the Arabidopsis genome. BMC Genomics, 9. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-9-219
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