Abstract

Drosophila telomeres contain multiple copies of HeT-A and TART retrotransposons. These elements specifically transpose to chromosomal ends, compensating for loss of terminal nucleotides that occurs at each cycle of DNA replication. We have investigated the role of these sequences in the formation of telomere-telomere attachments induced by mutations in the UbcD1 gene. We have constructed UbcD1 mutant males carrying terminally deleted X chromosomes devoid of both HeT-A and TART sequences. Cytological analysis of larval neuroblasts from these males revealed that telomeres lacking HeT-A and TART and normal telomeres that contain these sequences participate in telomeric fusions with comparable frequencies. These results indicate that the UbcD1 substrate(s) binds chromosomal termini in a sequence-independent manner. Previous studies have shown that the telomere-capping protein HP1 also binds telomeres lacking HeT-A and TART. Taken together, these findings strongly suggest that the assembly of DNA-protein complexes that protect chromosome ends from fusions do not require specific terminal sequences.

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