Abstract

A mariner-like element was cloned from the genome of the Asiatic honey bee, Apis cerana japonica (Hymenoptera, Apocrita). The (composite) clone, named Acmar1, was 1,378 bp long, and encoded 336 amino acids corresponding to a transposase-like putative polypeptide in a single open reading frame. The D,D(34)D motif, the catalytic domain of the mariner transposase, was present, although there was a deletion of five amino acid residues within it as compared with the active transposase in Drosophila mauritiana. Nineteen-bp-long imperfect inverted terminal repeat-like sequences flanked by TA dinucleotides, the typical target site for mariner insertion, were observed. Southern blot analysis using a fragment covering two-thirds of the Acmar1 transposase coding sequence as a probe indicated the presence of multiple Acmar1-like elements in the genome. Maximum-parsimony phylogenetic analysis based on the transposase amino acid sequences of insect mariner-like elements revealed that Acmar1 is a member of the mellifera subfamily.

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