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Isolation and sequence analysis of the wheat B genome subtelomeric DNA

BACKGROUND: Telomeric and subtelomeric regions are essential for genome stability and regular chromosome replication. In this work, we have characterized the wheat BAC (bacterial artificial chromosome) clones containing Spelt1 and Spelt52 sequences, which belong to the subtelomeric repeats of the B/...

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Autores principales: Salina, Elena A, Sergeeva, Ekaterina M, Adonina, Irina G, Shcherban, Andrey B, Afonnikov, Dmitry A, Belcram, Harry, Huneau, Cecile, Chalhoub, Boulos
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2756281/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19732459
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-414
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author Salina, Elena A
Sergeeva, Ekaterina M
Adonina, Irina G
Shcherban, Andrey B
Afonnikov, Dmitry A
Belcram, Harry
Huneau, Cecile
Chalhoub, Boulos
author_facet Salina, Elena A
Sergeeva, Ekaterina M
Adonina, Irina G
Shcherban, Andrey B
Afonnikov, Dmitry A
Belcram, Harry
Huneau, Cecile
Chalhoub, Boulos
author_sort Salina, Elena A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Telomeric and subtelomeric regions are essential for genome stability and regular chromosome replication. In this work, we have characterized the wheat BAC (bacterial artificial chromosome) clones containing Spelt1 and Spelt52 sequences, which belong to the subtelomeric repeats of the B/G genomes of wheats and Aegilops species from the section Sitopsis. RESULTS: The BAC library from Triticum aestivum cv. Renan was screened using Spelt1 and Spelt52 as probes. Nine positive clones were isolated; of them, clone 2050O8 was localized mainly to the distal parts of wheat chromosomes by in situ hybridization. The distribution of the other clones indicated the presence of different types of repetitive sequences in BACs. Use of different approaches allowed us to prove that seven of the nine isolated clones belonged to the subtelomeric chromosomal regions. Clone 2050O8 was sequenced and its sequence of 119 737 bp was annotated. It is composed of 33% transposable elements (TEs), 8.2% Spelt52 (namely, the subfamily Spelt52.2) and five non-TE-related genes. DNA transposons are predominant, making up 24.6% of the entire BAC clone, whereas retroelements account for 8.4% of the clone length. The full-length CACTA transposon Caspar covers 11 666 bp, encoding a transposase and CTG-2 proteins, and this transposon accounts for 40% of the DNA transposons. The in situ hybridization data for 2050O8 derived subclones in combination with the BLAST search against wheat mapped ESTs (expressed sequence tags) suggest that clone 2050O8 is located in the terminal bin 4BL-10 (0.95-1.0). Additionally, four of the predicted 2050O8 genes showed significant homology to four putative orthologous rice genes in the distal part of rice chromosome 3S and confirm the synteny to wheat 4BL. CONCLUSION: Satellite DNA sequences from the subtelomeric regions of diploid wheat progenitor can be used for selecting the BAC clones from the corresponding regions of hexaploid wheat chromosomes. It has been demonstrated for the first time that Spelt52 sequences were involved in the evolution of terminal regions of common wheat chromosomes. Our research provides new insights into the microcollinearity in the terminal regions of wheat chromosomes 4BL and rice chromosome 3S.
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spelling pubmed-27562812009-10-03 Isolation and sequence analysis of the wheat B genome subtelomeric DNA Salina, Elena A Sergeeva, Ekaterina M Adonina, Irina G Shcherban, Andrey B Afonnikov, Dmitry A Belcram, Harry Huneau, Cecile Chalhoub, Boulos BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Telomeric and subtelomeric regions are essential for genome stability and regular chromosome replication. In this work, we have characterized the wheat BAC (bacterial artificial chromosome) clones containing Spelt1 and Spelt52 sequences, which belong to the subtelomeric repeats of the B/G genomes of wheats and Aegilops species from the section Sitopsis. RESULTS: The BAC library from Triticum aestivum cv. Renan was screened using Spelt1 and Spelt52 as probes. Nine positive clones were isolated; of them, clone 2050O8 was localized mainly to the distal parts of wheat chromosomes by in situ hybridization. The distribution of the other clones indicated the presence of different types of repetitive sequences in BACs. Use of different approaches allowed us to prove that seven of the nine isolated clones belonged to the subtelomeric chromosomal regions. Clone 2050O8 was sequenced and its sequence of 119 737 bp was annotated. It is composed of 33% transposable elements (TEs), 8.2% Spelt52 (namely, the subfamily Spelt52.2) and five non-TE-related genes. DNA transposons are predominant, making up 24.6% of the entire BAC clone, whereas retroelements account for 8.4% of the clone length. The full-length CACTA transposon Caspar covers 11 666 bp, encoding a transposase and CTG-2 proteins, and this transposon accounts for 40% of the DNA transposons. The in situ hybridization data for 2050O8 derived subclones in combination with the BLAST search against wheat mapped ESTs (expressed sequence tags) suggest that clone 2050O8 is located in the terminal bin 4BL-10 (0.95-1.0). Additionally, four of the predicted 2050O8 genes showed significant homology to four putative orthologous rice genes in the distal part of rice chromosome 3S and confirm the synteny to wheat 4BL. CONCLUSION: Satellite DNA sequences from the subtelomeric regions of diploid wheat progenitor can be used for selecting the BAC clones from the corresponding regions of hexaploid wheat chromosomes. It has been demonstrated for the first time that Spelt52 sequences were involved in the evolution of terminal regions of common wheat chromosomes. Our research provides new insights into the microcollinearity in the terminal regions of wheat chromosomes 4BL and rice chromosome 3S. BioMed Central 2009-09-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2756281/ /pubmed/19732459 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-414 Text en Copyright © 2009 Salina et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Salina, Elena A
Sergeeva, Ekaterina M
Adonina, Irina G
Shcherban, Andrey B
Afonnikov, Dmitry A
Belcram, Harry
Huneau, Cecile
Chalhoub, Boulos
Isolation and sequence analysis of the wheat B genome subtelomeric DNA
title Isolation and sequence analysis of the wheat B genome subtelomeric DNA
title_full Isolation and sequence analysis of the wheat B genome subtelomeric DNA
title_fullStr Isolation and sequence analysis of the wheat B genome subtelomeric DNA
title_full_unstemmed Isolation and sequence analysis of the wheat B genome subtelomeric DNA
title_short Isolation and sequence analysis of the wheat B genome subtelomeric DNA
title_sort isolation and sequence analysis of the wheat b genome subtelomeric dna
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2756281/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19732459
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-10-414
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