The evolutionary analysis of the Tnt1 retrotransposon in Nicotiana species reveals the high variability of its regulatory sequences

Abstract
We studied the evolution of the tobacco Tnt1 retrotransposon by analyzing Tnt1 partial sequences containing both coding domains and U3 regulatory sequences obtained from a number of Nicotiana species. We detected three different subfamilies of Tnt1 elements, Tnt1A, Tnt1B, and Tnt1C, that differ completely in their U3 regions but share conserved flanking coding and LTR regions. U3 divergence between the three subfamilies is found in the region that contains the regulatory sequences that control the expression of the well-characterized Tnt1-94 element. This suggests that expression of the three Tnt1 subfamilies might be differently regulated. The three Tnt1 subfamilies were present in the Nicotiana genome at the time of species divergence, but have evolved independently since then in the different genomes. Each Tnt1 subfamily seems to have conserved its ability to transpose in a limited and different number of Nicotiana species. Our results illustrate the high variability of Tnt1 regulatory sequences. We propose that this high sequence variability could allow these elements to evolve regulatory mechanisms in order to optimize their coexistence with their host genome.

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