Distribution of Divo in Coffea genomes, a poorly described family of angiosperm LTR-Retrotransposons

Archive ouverte

Dupeyron, Mathilde | de Souza, Rogerio Fernandes | Hamon, Perla | de Kochko, Alexandre | Crouzillat, Dominique | Couturon, Emmanuel | Domingues, Douglas Silva | Guyot, Romain

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. Coffea arabica (the Arabica coffee) is an allotetraploid species originating from a recent hybridization between two diploid species: C. canephora and C. eugenioides. Transposable elements can drive structural and functional variation during the process of hybridization and allopolyploid formation in plants. To learn more about the evolution of the C. arabica genome, we characterized and studied a new Copia LTR-Retrotransposon (LTR-RT) family in diploid and allotetraploid Coffea genomes called Divo. It is a complete and relatively compact LTR-RT element (similar to 5 kb), carrying typical Gag and Pol Copia type domains. Reverse Trancriptase (RT) domain-based phylogeny demonstrated that Divo is a new and well-supported family in the Bianca lineage, but strictly restricted to dicotyledonous species. In C. canephora, Divo is expressed and showed a genomic distribution along gene rich and gene poor regions. The copy number, the molecular estimation of insertion time and the analysis at orthologous locations of insertions in diploid and allotetraploid coffee genomes suggest that Divo underwent a different and recent transposition activity in C. arabica and C. canephora when compared to C. eugenioides. The analysis of this novel LTR-RT family represents an important step toward uncovering the genome structure and evolution of C. arabica allotetraploid genome.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Terminal-repeat Retrotransposons with GAG domain (TR-GAG) in plant genomes: A new testimony on the complex world of transposable elements

Archive ouverte | Chaparro, Cristian | CCSD

International audience. A novel structure of nonautonomous long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons called terminal repeat with GAG domain (TR-GAG) has been described in plants, both in monocotyledonous, dicotyle...

Partial sequencing reveals the transposable element composition of Coffea genomes and provides evidence for distinct evolutionary stories

Archive ouverte | Guyot, Romain | CCSD

International audience. The Coffea genus, 124 described species, has a natural distribution spreading from inter-tropical Africa, to Western Indian Ocean Islands, India, Asia and up to Australasia. Two cultivated sp...

Genotyping-by-sequencing provides the first well-resolved phylogeny for coffee (Coffea) and insights into the evolution of caffeine content in its species

Archive ouverte | Hamon, Perla | CCSD

International audience. A comprehensive and meaningful phylogenetic hypothesis for the commercially important coffee genus(Coffea) has long been a key objective for coffee researchers. For molecular studies, progres...

Chargement des enrichissements...