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Marsupial genome analysis suggests that satellite DNA formation from walb endogenous retrovirus is an event specific to the red-necked wallaby.

Akihiko KogaKenji HashimotoYusuke HondaHidenori Nishihara
Published in: Genes to cells : devoted to molecular & cellular mechanisms (2022)
We recently identified walbRep, a satellite DNA residing in the genome of the red-necked wallaby Notamacropus rufogriseus. It originates from the walb endogenous retrovirus and is organized in a manner in which the provirus structure is retained. The walbRep repeat units feature an average pairwise nucleotide identity as high as 99.5%, raising the possibility of a recent origin. The tammar wallaby N. eugenii is a species estimated to have diverged from the red-necked wallaby 2-3 million years ago. In PCR analyses of these two and other related species, walbRep-specific fragment amplification was observed only in the red-necked wallaby. Sequence database searches for the tammar wallaby resulted in sequence alignment lists that were sufficiently powerful to exclude the possibility of walbRep existence. These results suggested that the walbRep formation occurred in the red-necked wallaby lineage after its divergence from the tammar wallaby lineage, thus in a time span of maximum 3 million years.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • machine learning
  • cell free
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • amino acid
  • genetic diversity
  • real time pcr