
Regulation of I-Transposon Activity in Drosophila: Evidence for Cosuppression of Nonhomologous Transgenes and Possible Role of Ancestral I-Related Pericentromeric Elements
Author(s) -
Silke Jensen,
Marie-Pierre Gassama,
Xavier Dramard,
Thiérry Heidmann
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1093/genetics/162.3.1197
Subject(s) - biology , gene silencing , genetics , transposable element , gene , transgene , retrotransposon , rna interference , homology (biology) , rna silencing , reporter gene , genome , rna , gene expression
We have previously shown that the activity of functional I retrotransposons (I factors) introduced into Drosophila devoid of such elements can be repressed by transgenes containing an internal fragment of the I factor itself and that this repressing effect presents the characteristic features of homology-dependent gene silencing or cosuppression. Here we show that the same transgenes can induce silencing of a nonhomologous reporter gene containing as the sole I-factor sequence its 100-bp promoter fragment. Silencing of the nonhomologous reporter gene shows strong similarities to I-factor cosuppression: It does not require any translation product from the regulating transgenes, sense and antisense constructs are equally potent, and the silencing effect is only maternally transmitted and fully reversible. A search for genomic I-like sequences containing domains with similarities to those of both the regulating and the reporter transgenes led to the identification of four such elements, which therefore could act as intermediates-or relays-in the cosuppression machinery. These results strongly suggest that ancestral transposition-defective I-related elements, which are naturally present in the Drosophila genome, may participate per se in the natural conditions of I-factor silencing.