Abstract

The telomerase reverse transcriptase promotes genome integrity by continually synthesizing a short telomere repeat sequence on chromosome ends. Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein complex whose integral RNA subunit TER contains a template domain with a sequence complementary to the telomere repeat that is reiteratively copied by the catalytic subunit. Although TER harbors well-conserved secondary structure elements, its nucleotide sequence is highly divergent, even among closely related organisms. Thus, it has been extremely challenging to identify TER orthologs by bioinformatics strategies. Recently, TER was reported in the flowering plant, Arabidopsis thaliana. In contrast to other model organisms, A. thaliana encodes two TER subunits, only one of which is required to maintain telomere tracts in vivo. Here we investigate the evolution of the loci that encode TER in Arabidopsis by comparison to the same locus in its close relatives. We employ a combination of PCR and bioinformatics approaches to identify putative TER loci based on syntenic regions flanking the TER1 and TER2 loci of A. thaliana. Unexpectedly, we discovered that the genomic regions encoding the two A. thaliana TERs occur as a single locus in other Brassicaceae. Moreover, we find striking sequence divergence within the telomere template domain of putative TERs from Brassicaceae, including some orthologous loci that completely lack a template domain. Finally, evolution of the locus is characterized by lineage-specific events rather than changes shared among closely related species. We conclude that the Arabidopsis TER duplication occurred very recently, and further that changes at this locus in other Brassicaceae indicate the process of TER evolution may be different in plants compared with vertebrates and yeast.

Highlights

  • The ends of eukaryotic chromosomes are typically composed of simple arrays of G-rich repeats

  • We obtained putative telomerase RNA (TER) loci from 14 species in the family Brassicaceae using a combination of PCR and bioinformatics approaches

  • Results from early rounds of hiTAIL PCR indicated that the RAD52 and TAD3 genes might be located on the same chromosome in some species of Brassicaceae

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Summary

Introduction

The ends of eukaryotic chromosomes are typically composed of simple arrays of G-rich repeats. In plants, this sequence is TTTAGGG, while vertebrate telomeres consist of the related sequence TTAGGG. Telomeric DNA is synthesized and maintained through the action of the telomerase reverse transcriptase. Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) enzyme minimally comprised of a reverse transcriptase subunit (TERT) responsible for catalytic activity along with an RNA moiety, the telomerase RNA (TER). TER contains a short nucleotide sequence complementary to the G-rich strand of telomeric DNA. This region is termed the template domain, and it is reiteratively copied by TERT during the synthesis of telomeric repeats

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