High-throughput analysis of the satellitome illuminates satellite DNA evolution
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ruiz-Ruano Campaña, Francisco Jesús; López León, María Dolores; Cabrero Hurtado, Josefa; Martínez Camacho, Juan PedroEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2016-07-07Referencia bibliográfica
Ruiz-Ruano, F. J. et al. High-throughput analysis of the satellitome illuminates satellite DNA evolution. Sci. Rep. 6, 28333; doi: 10.1038/srep28333 (2016)
Patrocinador
Spanish Junta de Andalucia (Plan Andaluz de Investigacion: CVI-6649); FEDER fundsResumen
Satellite DNA (satDNA) is a major component yet the great unknown of eukaryote genomes and
clearly underrepresented in genome sequencing projects. Here we show the high-throughput analysis
of satellite DNA content in the migratory locust by means of the bioinformatic analysis of Illumina
reads with the RepeatExplorer and RepeatMasker programs. This unveiled 62 satDNA families and we
propose the term “satellitome” for the whole collection of different satDNA families in a genome. The
finding that satDNAs were present in many contigs of the migratory locust draft genome indicates that
they show many genomic locations invisible by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). The cytological
pattern of five satellites showing common descent (belonging to the SF3 superfamily) suggests that
non-clustered satDNAs can become into clustered through local amplification at any of the many
genomic loci resulting from previous dissemination of short satDNA arrays. The fact that all kinds of
satDNA (micro- mini- and satellites) can show the non-clustered and clustered states suggests that all
these elements are mostly similar, except for repeat length. Finally, the presence of VNTRs in bacteria,
showing similar properties to non-clustered satDNAs in eukaryotes, suggests that this kind of tandem
repeats show common properties in all living beings.