Identification of the Telomere elongation mutation in Drosophila
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Abstract
Background: Telomeres in Drosophila melanogaster are similar to those of other eukaryotes in terms of their function, although they are formed by non-LTR retrotransposons instead of telomerase-based short repeats. The length of the telomeres in Drosophila depends on the number of copies of these transposable elements. A dominant mutation, Tel1, causes a several-fold elongation of telomeres. Methods: . In this study we identified the Tel1 mutation by a combination of transposon-induced, site-specific recombination and next generation sequencing. Results: . Recombination located Tel1 to a 15 kb region in 92A. Comparison of the DNA sequence in this region with the Drosophila Genetic Reference Panel of wild type genomic sequences delimited Tel1 to a 3 bp deletion inside intron 8 of Ino80. Discussion: The mapped Tel1 mutation (3-bp deletion found in Ino80) did not appear to affect the quantity or length of the Ino80 transcript. Tel1 causes a significant reduction in transcripts of CG18493, a gene nested in an intron 8 of Ino80, which is expressed in ovaries and expected to encode a serine-type peptidase.
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