The Satellite DNA PcH-Sat, Isolated and Characterized in the Limpet Patella caerulea (Mollusca, Gastropoda), Suggests the Origin from a Nin-SINE Transposable Element.
Agnese PetraccioliNicola MaioRosa CarotenutoGaetano OdiernaFabio Maria GuarinoPublished in: Genes (2024)
Satellite DNA (sat-DNA) was previously described as junk and selfish DNA in the cellular economy, without a clear functional role. However, during the last two decades, evidence has been accumulated about the roles of sat-DNA in different cellular functions and its probable involvement in tumorigenesis and adaptation to environmental changes. In molluscs, studies on sat-DNAs have been performed mainly on bivalve species, especially those of economic interest. Conversely, in Gastropoda (which includes about 80% of the currently described molluscs species), studies on sat-DNA have been largely neglected. In this study, we isolated and characterized a sat-DNA, here named PcH-sat, in the limpet Patella caerulea using the restriction enzyme method, particularly Hae III. Monomeric units of PcH-sat are 179 bp long, AT-rich (58.7%), and with an identity among monomers ranging from 91.6 to 99.8%. Southern blot showed that PcH-sat is conserved in P. depressa and P. ulyssiponensis , while a smeared signal of hybridization was present in the other three investigated limpets ( P. ferruginea , P. rustica and P. vulgata ). Dot blot showed that PcH-sat represents about 10% of the genome of P. caerulea , 5% of that of P. depressa , and 0.3% of that of P. ulyssiponensis . FISH showed that PcH-sat was mainly localized on pericentromeric regions of chromosome pairs 2 and 4-7 of P. caerulea (2n = 18). A database search showed that PcH-sat contains a large segment (of 118 bp) showing high identity with a homologous trait of the Nin-SINE transposable element (TE) of the patellogastropod Lottia gigantea , supporting the hypothesis that TEs are involved in the rising and tandemization processes of sat-DNAs.