Diverse cis factors controlling Alu retrotransposition: What causes Alu elements to die?

  1. Matthew S. Comeaux,
  2. Astrid M. Roy-Engel,
  3. Dale J. Hedges,1 and
  4. Prescott L. Deininger,2
  1. Tulane Cancer Center and Dept. of Epidemiology, Tulane University Health Sciences Center, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112, USA

    Abstract

    The human genome contains nearly 1.1 million Alu elements comprising roughly 11% of its total DNA content. Alu elements use a copy and paste retrotransposition mechanism that can result in de novo disease insertion alleles. There are nearly 900,000 old Alu elements from subfamilies S and J that appear to be almost completely inactive, and about 200,000 from subfamily Y or younger, which include a few thousand copies of the Ya5 subfamily which makes up the majority of current activity. Given the much higher copy number of the older Alu subfamilies, it is not known why all of the active Alu elements belong to the younger subfamilies. We present a systematic analysis evaluating the observed sequence variation in the different sections of an Alu element on retrotransposition. The length of the longest number of uninterrupted adenines in the A-tail, the degree of A-tail heterogeneity, the length of the 3′ unique end after the A-tail and before the RNA polymerase III terminator, and random mutations found in the right monomer all modulate the retrotransposition efficiency. These changes occur over different evolutionary time frames. The combined impact of sequence changes in all of these regions explains why young Alus are currently causing disease through retrotransposition, and the old Alus have lost their ability to retrotranspose. We present a predictive model to evaluate the retrotransposition capability of individual Alu elements and successfully applied it to identify the first putative source element for a disease-causing Alu insertion in a patient with cystic fibrosis.

    Footnotes

    • 1 Present address: Miami Institute for Human Genomics, 1120 NW 14th Street, Miami, FL 33136, USA.

    • 2 Corresponding author.

      E-mail pdeinin{at}tulane.edu; fax (504) 988-5516.

    • [Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]

    • Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.089789.108.

      • Received December 2, 2008.
      • Accepted February 9, 2009.
    • Freely available online through the Genome Research Open Access option.

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