Journal Article10.1007/S004380000343
Comparative analyses of the distribution of various transposable elements in Pyricularia and their activity during and after the sexual cycle.
Yukiko Eto,Kenichi Ikeda,Izumi Chuma,T. Kataoka,Shinji Kuroda,N. Kikuchi,Le Dinh Don,Motoaki Kusaba,Hitoshi Nakayashiki,Yukio Tosa,Shigeyuki Mayama +10 more
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TL;DR: Analysis of the sequences flanking the new MAGGY insertions revealed that they were each associated with a 5-bp target-site duplication at both ends of the insertion, suggesting that MAGGY was the most active of the elements tested for transposition in Pyricularia.
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Abstract: We examined the distribution and activity of six transposable elements found in the blast fungus, Pyricularia spp. Sixty-eight isolates from various gramineous plants were used for the survey, and the elements were plotted on a dendrogram constructed on the basis of their rDNA-ITS2 sequences. MGR586 and Pot2 (Class II elements), Mg-SINE (SINE-like element) and MGR583 (LINE-like retrotransposon) were widely distributed among the Pyricularia isolates, suggesting that they are old elements which arose in, or invaded, the Pyricularia population at very early stages in its evolution. By contrast, the distribution of the LTR-retrotransposons MAGGY and Grasshopper was limited or sporadic, suggesting that they are relatively new elements which recently invaded the Pyricularia population by means of horizontal transfer events. The activity of these elements was evaluated by Southern analysis in progenies derived from a cross between a Setaria isolate and a Triticum isolate. Many new MAGGY signals were observed, which were absent in the parental isolates, at various stages of the sexual cycle and following vegetative growth. In contrast, the other elements yielded few, if any, such signals. Analysis of the sequences flanking the new MAGGY insertions revealed that they were each associated with a 5-bp target-site duplication at both ends of the insertion. These data suggested that MAGGY was the most active of the elements tested for transposition in Pyricularia.
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Citations
Origins of host-specific populations of the blast pathogen, Magnaporthe oryzae, in crop domestication with subsequent expansion of pandemic clones on rice and weeds of rice
Brett C. Couch,Isabelle Fudal,Marc-Henri Lebrun,Didier Tharreau,Barbara Valent,Pham van Kim,Jean-Loup Nottéghem,Linda M. Kohn +7 more
TL;DR: The rice-infecting lineage is characterized by high copy number of the transposable element MGR586 (Pot3) and by a loss of AVR-Co39, and host-haplotype association is evidenced by low pathogenicity on hosts associated with other haplotypes.
361
Transposable Elements in Filamentous Fungi
Marie-Josée Daboussi,Pierre Capy +1 more
TL;DR: All eukaryotic TEs described are found including an extraordinary prevalence of active members of the pogo family, leading to significant advances in perception of the mechanisms underlying genetic changes in these organisms.
298
Transposition of MINE, a composite retrotransposon, in the avirulence gene ACE1 of the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea.
TL;DR: The ACE1 avirulence gene allele from the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe grisea was characterized in virulent isolate 2/0/3, revealing the insertion of a 1.9 kb MINE retrotransposon in the last ACE1 exon.
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Genome size evolution: Within-species variation in genome size
TL;DR: A recent study of genome size in various Drosophila species concludes that there is a significant statistical difference in genome size between species, and some significant differences between strains in some species.
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Transposable elements as stress adaptive capacitors induce genomic instability in fungal pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae.
Sonia Chadha,M. Sharma +1 more
TL;DR: How common field stresses change genome dynamics of pathogen is demonstrated and perspective is provided to explore the role of TEs in genome adaptability, signalling network and its impact on the virulence of fungal pathogens.