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Suicidal Autointegration of Sleeping Beauty and piggyBac Transposons in Eukaryotic Cells

Transposons are discrete segments of DNA that have the distinctive ability to move and replicate within genomes across the tree of life. ‘Cut and paste’ DNA transposition involves excision from a donor locus and reintegration into a new locus in the genome. We studied molecular events following the...

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Autores principales: Wang, Yongming, Wang, Jichang, Devaraj, Anatharam, Singh, Manvendra, Jimenez Orgaz, Ana, Chen, Jia-Xuan, Selbach, Matthias, Ivics, Zoltán, Izsvák, Zsuzsanna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3952818/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24625543
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004103
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author Wang, Yongming
Wang, Jichang
Devaraj, Anatharam
Singh, Manvendra
Jimenez Orgaz, Ana
Chen, Jia-Xuan
Selbach, Matthias
Ivics, Zoltán
Izsvák, Zsuzsanna
author_facet Wang, Yongming
Wang, Jichang
Devaraj, Anatharam
Singh, Manvendra
Jimenez Orgaz, Ana
Chen, Jia-Xuan
Selbach, Matthias
Ivics, Zoltán
Izsvák, Zsuzsanna
author_sort Wang, Yongming
collection PubMed
description Transposons are discrete segments of DNA that have the distinctive ability to move and replicate within genomes across the tree of life. ‘Cut and paste’ DNA transposition involves excision from a donor locus and reintegration into a new locus in the genome. We studied molecular events following the excision steps of two eukaryotic DNA transposons, Sleeping Beauty (SB) and piggyBac (PB) that are widely used for genome manipulation in vertebrate species. SB originates from fish and PB from insects; thus, by introducing these transposons to human cells we aimed to monitor the process of establishing a transposon-host relationship in a naïve cellular environment. Similarly to retroviruses, neither SB nor PB is capable of self-avoidance because a significant portion of the excised transposons integrated back into its own genome in a suicidal process called autointegration. Barrier-to-autointegration factor (BANF1), a cellular co-factor of certain retroviruses, inhibited transposon autointegration, and was detected in higher-order protein complexes containing the SB transposase. Increasing size sensitized transposition for autointegration, consistent with elevated vulnerability of larger transposons. Both SB and PB were affected similarly by the size of the transposon in three different assays: excision, autointegration and productive transposition. Prior to reintegration, SB is completely separated from the donor molecule and followed an unbiased autointegration pattern, not associated with local hopping. Self-disruptive autointegration occurred at similar frequency for both transposons, while aberrant, pseudo-transposition events were more frequently observed for PB.
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spelling pubmed-39528182014-03-18 Suicidal Autointegration of Sleeping Beauty and piggyBac Transposons in Eukaryotic Cells Wang, Yongming Wang, Jichang Devaraj, Anatharam Singh, Manvendra Jimenez Orgaz, Ana Chen, Jia-Xuan Selbach, Matthias Ivics, Zoltán Izsvák, Zsuzsanna PLoS Genet Research Article Transposons are discrete segments of DNA that have the distinctive ability to move and replicate within genomes across the tree of life. ‘Cut and paste’ DNA transposition involves excision from a donor locus and reintegration into a new locus in the genome. We studied molecular events following the excision steps of two eukaryotic DNA transposons, Sleeping Beauty (SB) and piggyBac (PB) that are widely used for genome manipulation in vertebrate species. SB originates from fish and PB from insects; thus, by introducing these transposons to human cells we aimed to monitor the process of establishing a transposon-host relationship in a naïve cellular environment. Similarly to retroviruses, neither SB nor PB is capable of self-avoidance because a significant portion of the excised transposons integrated back into its own genome in a suicidal process called autointegration. Barrier-to-autointegration factor (BANF1), a cellular co-factor of certain retroviruses, inhibited transposon autointegration, and was detected in higher-order protein complexes containing the SB transposase. Increasing size sensitized transposition for autointegration, consistent with elevated vulnerability of larger transposons. Both SB and PB were affected similarly by the size of the transposon in three different assays: excision, autointegration and productive transposition. Prior to reintegration, SB is completely separated from the donor molecule and followed an unbiased autointegration pattern, not associated with local hopping. Self-disruptive autointegration occurred at similar frequency for both transposons, while aberrant, pseudo-transposition events were more frequently observed for PB. Public Library of Science 2014-03-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3952818/ /pubmed/24625543 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004103 Text en © 2014 Wang et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wang, Yongming
Wang, Jichang
Devaraj, Anatharam
Singh, Manvendra
Jimenez Orgaz, Ana
Chen, Jia-Xuan
Selbach, Matthias
Ivics, Zoltán
Izsvák, Zsuzsanna
Suicidal Autointegration of Sleeping Beauty and piggyBac Transposons in Eukaryotic Cells
title Suicidal Autointegration of Sleeping Beauty and piggyBac Transposons in Eukaryotic Cells
title_full Suicidal Autointegration of Sleeping Beauty and piggyBac Transposons in Eukaryotic Cells
title_fullStr Suicidal Autointegration of Sleeping Beauty and piggyBac Transposons in Eukaryotic Cells
title_full_unstemmed Suicidal Autointegration of Sleeping Beauty and piggyBac Transposons in Eukaryotic Cells
title_short Suicidal Autointegration of Sleeping Beauty and piggyBac Transposons in Eukaryotic Cells
title_sort suicidal autointegration of sleeping beauty and piggybac transposons in eukaryotic cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3952818/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24625543
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1004103
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