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Genetics, Vol. 178, 393-404, January 2008, Copyright © 2008
doi:10.1534/genetics.107.080275
Loss of LINE-1 Activity in the Megabats
Michael A. Cantrell, LuAnn Scott, Celeste J. Brown, Armando R. Martinez and Holly A. Wichman1
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho 83844-3051
1 Corresponding author: Department of Biological Sciences, P.O. Box 443051, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844-3051.
E-mail: hwichman{at}uidaho.edu
LINE-1 (L1) retrotransposons are the most abundant type of mammalian retroelement. They have profound effects on genome plasticity and have been proposed to fulfill essential host functions, yet it remains unclear where they lie on the spectrum from parasitism to mutualism. Their ubiquity makes it difficult to determine the extent of their effects on genome evolution and gene expression because of the relative dearth of animal models lacking L1 activity. We have isolated L1 sequences from 11 megabat species by a method that enriches for recently inserted L1s and have done a bioinformatic examination of L1 sequences from a 12th species whose genome was recently shotgun sequenced. An L1 extinction event appears to have occurred at least 24 million years ago (MYA) in an ancestor of the megabats. The ancestor was unusual in having maintained two highly divergent long-term L1 lineages with different levels of activity, which appear, on an evolutionary scale, to have simultaneously lost that activity. These megabat species can serve as new animal models to ask what effect loss of L1 activity has on mammalian genome evolution and gene expression.
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