Abstract

We studied the dynamics of hobo elements of Drosophila melanogaster in Japan with the goal of better understanding the invasion and evolution of transposons in natural populations. One hundred and twenty-six isofemale lines and 11 older stocks were tested for the presence and genetic phenotype of hobo elements. The oldest H strain, containing complete and deleted hobo elements, is Hikone-H (1957), but Hikone-R (1952) has no hobo-homologous sequences. The findings suggest that the hobo element invaded Japanese populations in the mid-1950s, at about the same time as the P element invasion in Japan. This chronology is consistent with the hypothesis of a recent worldwide hobo element invasion into D. melanogaster in the mid-1950s. In recently collected populations, H degrees strains (low hobo activity and high repression potency) are predominant, whereas H+ strains (high hobo activity and high repression potency) are predominant in the Sakishima Islands, the most southwestern islands of the Japanese archipelago. H' strains (high hobo activity and low repression potency) were first found in limited island populations. Japanese populations have not only full-size hobo elements and 1.5 kb Th elements but also characteristic deletion derivatives (1.6 and 1.8 kb XhoI fragments) that we have named Jh elements. These results are consistent with transgenic experiments with complete hobo elements, in which populations evolved to H+ or H degrees via H', and in which 1.8 kb fragments appeared. We conclude that hobo elements invaded the central region of Japan, spread to the far islands, and that the invasion is currently at an intermediate, nonequilibrium stage.

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