The piRNA cluster torimochi is an expanding transposon in cultured silkworm cells

Abstract

PIWI proteins and PIWI-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) play a central role in repressing transposable elements in animal germ cells. It is thought that piRNAs are mainly produced from discrete genomic loci named piRNA clusters, which often contain many dead'' transposon remnants from past invasions and have heterochromatic features. In the genome of silkworm ovary-derived cultured cells called BmN4, a well-established model for piRNA research, torimochi was previously annotated as a unique and specialized genomic region that can capture transgenes and produce new piRNAs bearing a trans-silencing activity. However, the sequence identity of torimochi has remained elusive. Here, we carefully characterized torimochi by utilizing the updated silkworm genome sequence and the long-read sequencer MinION. We found that torimochi is in fact a full-length gypsy-like LTR retrotransposon, which is exceptionally active and has massively expanded its copy number in BmN4 cells. Many copies of torimochi in BmN4 cells have features of open chromatin and the ability to produce piRNAs. Therefore, torimochi may represent a young, growing piRNA cluster, which is still alive’’ and active in transposition yet capable of trapping other transposable elements to produce de novo piRNAs.

Publication
PLoS Genet.
Keisuke Shoji
Keisuke Shoji
Associate Professor

I am interested in the attack and defense of self and non-self.