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Characterization of terminal-repeat retrotransposon in miniature (TRIM) in Brassica relatives

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Abstract

We have newly identified five Terminal-repeat retrotransposon in miniature (TRIM) families, four from Brassica and one from Arabidopsis. A total of 146 elements, including three Arabidopsis families reported before, are extracted from genomics data of Brassica and Arabidopsis, and these are grouped into eight distinct lineages, Br1 to Br4 derived from Brassica and At1 to At4 derived from Arabidopsis. Based on the occurrence of TRIM elements in 434 Mb of B. oleracea shotgun sequences and 96 Mb of B. rapa BAC end sequences, total number of TRIM members of Br1, Br2, Br3, and Br4 families are roughly estimated to be present in 660 and 530 copies in B. oleracea and B. rapa genomes, respectively. Studies on insertion site polymorphisms of four elements across taxa in the tribe Brassiceae infer the taxonomic lineage and dating of the insertion time. Active roles of the TRIM elements for evolution of the duplicated genes are inferred in the highly replicated Brassica genome.

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Acknowledgments

This work was supported by grants from the BioGreen 21 Program, RDA, and NIAB, Korea. The authors thank Macrogen (http://www.macrogen.com/english/index.html) for BAC end sequencing. We are grateful for Maryana Bhak and Chang-Bae Kim for valuable comments.

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Correspondence to Beom-Seok Park.

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Communicated by J. S. Heslop-Harrison.

Tae-Jin Yang and Soo-Jin Kwon have equally contributed to this work.

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Yang, TJ., Kwon, SJ., Choi, BS. et al. Characterization of terminal-repeat retrotransposon in miniature (TRIM) in Brassica relatives. Theor Appl Genet 114, 627–636 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00122-006-0463-3

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00122-006-0463-3

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