Proteomics technique opens new frontiers in mobilome research

  • Davidson A
  • Matthews D
  • Maringer K
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Abstract

ABSTRACTA large proportion of the genome of most eukaryotic organisms consists of highly repetitive mobile genetic elements. The sum of these elements is called the “mobilome,” which in eukaryotes is made up mostly of transposons. Transposable elements contribute to disease, evolution, and normal physiology by mediating genetic rearrangement, and through the “domestication” of transposon proteins for cellular functions. Although ‘omics studies of mobilome genomes and transcriptomes are common, technical challenges have hampered high-throughput global proteomics analyses of transposons. In a recent paper, we overcame these technical hurdles using a technique called “proteomics informed by transcriptomics” (PIT), and thus published the first unbiased global mobilome-derived proteome for any organism (using cell lines derived from the mosquito Aedes aegypti). In this commentary, we describe our methods in more detail, and summarise our major findings. We also use new genome sequencing data to show that, in m...

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Davidson, A. D., Matthews, D. A., & Maringer, K. (2017). Proteomics technique opens new frontiers in mobilome research. Mobile Genetic Elements, 7(4), 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1080/2159256x.2017.1362494

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