Species of the virilis group of Drosophila differ by multiple inversions and chromosome fusions that probably accompanied, or led to, speciation. Drosophila virilis has the primitive karyotype for the group, and natural populations are exceptional in having no chromosomal polymorphisms. We report that the genomic locations of Penelope and Ulysses transposons are nonrandomly distributed in 12 strains of D. virilis. Furthermore, Penelope and Ulysses insertion sites in D. virilis show a statistically significant association with the breakpoints of inversions found in other species of the virilis group. Sixteen newly induced chromosomal rearrangements were isolated from the progeny of D. virilis hybrid dysgenic crosses, including 12 inversions, 2 translocations, and 2 deletions. Penelope and Ulysses were associated with the breakpoints of over half of these new rearrangements. Many rearrangement breakpoints also coincide with the chromosomal locations of Penelope and Ulysses insertions in the parental strains and with breakpoints of inversions previously established for other species of the group. Analysis of homologous sequences from D. virilis and Drosophila lummei indicated that Penelope insertion sites were closely, but not identically, located at the nucleotide sequence level. Overall, these results indicate that Penelope and Ulysses insert in a limited number of genomic locations and are consistent with the possibility that these elements play an important role in the evolution of the virilis species group. B esides inducing many types of small mutations, such as insertions and deletions, transposable elements (TEs) are well known to promote the formation of inversions and other large and small chromosomal rearrangements (e.g., ref. 1). A growing body of evidence suggests that TEs mediate genome restructuring in natural populations of a wide variety of species. For example, in hominids, a Y chromosome inversion was mediated by recombination between LINE-1 elements before the radiation of extant human populations (2), and TEs appear to have played a role in mediating some of the major restructuring of the human sex chromosomes that has taken place during the last 300 million years (3). Also, the five families of Ty retrotransposons have been important in restructuring the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome (4). In wild populations of Drosophila melanogaster, the hobo element has been implicated in the origin of endemic inversions (5) and in Drosophila buzzatii, the breakpoints (BPs) of a cosmopolitan inversion contain large insertions corresponding to a TE (6). The frequency and relative importance of TE-induced rearrangements in natural populations have, however, been difficult to establish in any satisfactory quantitative way. One likely reason is that instability and rapid divergence of TEs make their identification at rearrangement BPs increasingly difficult with the passage of time (7).In contrast to the rich karyotypic variation found in most of the 12 species of the D. virilis species group, one member, D. ...
The Penelope element is the key element responsible for mobilization of other transposable elements in the course of hybrid dysgenesis in Drosophila virilis. Penelope has an unusually complex, highly variable organization in all studied species of the virlis group. Thc BRIDGE1 element from the fish Fugu rubripes is homologous to Penelope, and database searches detected additional homologous sequences among Expressed Sequence Tags from the flatworm Schistosoma mansonii and the nematode Ancylostoma caninum. Phylogenetic analysis shows that the reverse transcriptase of the Penelope group does not belong to any of the characterized major retroelement lineages, but apparently represents a novel branch of non-LTR retroelements. Sequence profile analysis results in the prediction that the C-terminal domain of the Penelope polyprotein is an active endonuclease related to intron-encoded endonucleases and the bacterial repair endonuclease UvrC, which could function as an integrase. No retroelements containing a predicted endonuclease of this family have been described previously. Phylogenetic analysis of Penelope copies isolated from several species of the virilis group reveals two subfamilies of Penelope elements, one of which includes full-length copies whose nucleotide sequences are almost identical, whereas the other one consists of highly diverged defective copies. Phylogenetic analysis of Penelope suggests both vertical transmission of the element and probable horizontal transfers. These findings support the notion that Penelope invasions occurred repeatedly in the evolution of the virilis group.
The distributions of Penelope and Ulysses, two transposable elements that can induce hybrid dysgenesis, were studied in several species groups of Drosophila. No significant hybridization to Penelope and Ulysses probes was detected by Southern blot analyses of species outside the virilis group. In contrast, both element families have had a long residence in all species of the virilis species group, as indicated by their strong presence in the heterochromatic chromocenter. Except for D. kanekoi, D. lummei, and some strains of D. virilis, species of the group carry full-sized, and at least potentially functional, copies of both element families. Consistent with the occurrence of recent transposition, Penelope and Ulysses elements are located at different chromosomal sites in different geographical strains of the same species. A total of 79 Penelope and 47 Ulysses euchromatic insertion sites were localized to chromosomal subsections in species of the virilis group. Highly significant deviations from independence of the distributions of Penelope and Ulysses and previously established inversion breakpoints were documented, suggesting that these transposable elements may have played an important role in genomic reorganization and evolution of the virilis species group, which is especially rich in karyotypic variation.
The Penelope family of retroelements was first described in species of the Drosophila virilis group. Intact elements encode a reverse transcriptase and an endonuclease of the UvrC type, which may play a role in Penelope integration. Penelope is a key element in the induction of D. virilis hybrid dysgenesis, which involves the mobilization of several unrelated families of transposable elements. We here report the successful introduction of Penelope into the germ line of Drosophila melanogaster by P element-mediated transformation with three different constructs. Penelope is actively transcribed in the D. melanogaster genome only in lines transformed with a construct containing a full-length Penelope clone. The transcript is identical to that detected in D. virilis dysgenic hybrids. Most newly transposed Penelope elements have a very complex organization. Significant proliferation of Penelope copy number occurred in some lines during the 24-month period after transformation. The absence of copy number increase with two other constructs suggests that the 5 and͞or 3 UTRs of Penelope are required for successful transposition in D. melanogaster. No insect retroelement has previously been reported to be actively transcribed and to increase in copy number after interspecific transformation.
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