Abstract

BackgroundTransposable elements are major constituents of eukaryote genomes and have a great impact on genome structure and stability. Considering their mutational abilities, TEs can contribute to the genetic diversity and evolution of organisms. Knowledge of their distribution among several genomes is an essential condition to study their dynamics and to better understand their role in species evolution. DIRS1-like retrotransposons are a particular group of retrotransposons according to their mode of transposition that implies a tyrosine recombinase. To date, they have been described in a restricted number of species in comparison with the LTR retrotransposons. In this paper, we determine the distribution of DIRS1-like elements among 25 decapod species, 10 of them living in hydrothermal vents that correspond to particularly unstable environments.ResultsUsing PCR approaches, we have identified 15 new DIRS1-like families in 15 diverse decapod species (shrimps, lobsters, crabs and galatheid crabs). Hydrothermal organisms show a particularly great diversity of DIRS1-like elements with 5 families characterized among Alvinocarididae shrimps and 3 in the galatheid crab Munidopsis recta. Phylogenic analyses show that these elements are divergent toward the DIRS1-like families previously described in other crustaceans and arthropods and form a new clade called AlDIRS1. At larger scale, the distribution of DIRS1-like retrotransposons appears more or less patchy depending on the taxa considered. Indeed, a scattered distribution can be observed in the infraorder Brachyura whereas all the species tested in infraorders Caridea and Astacidea harbor some DIRS1-like elements.ConclusionOur results lead to nearly double both the number of DIRS1-like elements described to date, and the number of species known to harbor these ones. In this study, we provide the first degenerate primers designed to look specifically for DIRS1-like retrotransposons. They allowed for revealing for the first time a widespread distribution of these elements among a large phylum, here the order Decapoda. They also suggest some peculiar features of these retrotransposons in hydrothermal organisms where a great diversity of elements is already observed. Finally, this paper constitutes the first essential step which allows for considering further studies based on the dynamics of the DIRS1-like retrotransposons among several genomes.

Highlights

  • Transposable elements are major constituents of eukaryote genomes and have a great impact on genome structure and stability

  • Fishing out DIRS1-like pol sequences in hydrothermal shrimps In the course of looking for Ty3/gypsy-like Long Terminal Repeat (LTR) retrotransposons in three hydrothermal shrimps (Rimicaris exoculata, Chorocaris chacei and Mirocaris fortunata) using degenerate primers GD1 and GD2 corresponding to the "RMPFGL" and "LTTDAS" conserved motifs of the reverse transcriptase (RT)

  • The regions in which the primers were designed are only partly conserved between Ty3/ gypsy-like and DIRS1-like elements, partial conservation may be sufficient for them to anneal on DIRS1-like sequences, because primers are degenerate

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Summary

Introduction

Transposable elements are major constituents of eukaryote genomes and have a great impact on genome structure and stability Considering their mutational abilities, TEs can contribute to the genetic diversity and evolution of organisms. Deep-sea vents are chemosynthetic environments which are considered as extreme as compared to usual life standards due to their physico-chemical characteristics They show high levels of temperature, pressure, heavy metals and sulfide [1]. Other marine environments (e.g., the intertidal zone) are variable, hydrothermal environments are unstable due to (i) the intensity of variations observed in deep-sea vents, e.g., variation of temperature from 400 to 2°C over few centimeters [3], (ii) local random mix of vent fluids with surrounding waters [4] and (iii) the relatively short lifetime of vents [5]. The vent shrimps Rimicaris exoculata, which usually live between 15°C and 30°C, endure sudden changes of thermal conditions due to the convection of fluids and can survive to exposure to very high temperature vent emissions [6,7]

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