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      The hobo transposable element has transposase-dependent and -independent excision activity in drosophilid species.

      1 ,
      Molecular & general genetics : MGG
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          Mobility of the hobo transposable element was determined for several strains of Drosophila melanogaster and several Drosophila species. Mobility was assessed by use of an in vivo transient assay in the soma of developing embryos, which monitored hobo excision from injected indicator plasmids. Excision was detected in a D. melanogaster strain (cn; ry42) devoid of endogenous hobo elements only after co-injection of a helper plasmid containing functional hobo transposase under either heat shock or normal promoter regulation. Excision was also detected in D. melanogaster without helper in strains known to contain genomic copies of hobo. In Drosophila species confirmed not to contain hobo, hobo excision occurred at significant rates both in the presence and absence of co-injected helper plasmid. In four of the seven species tested, excision frequencies were two- to fivefold lower in the presence of plasmid-borne hobo, hobo excision donor sites were sequenced in indicator plasmids extracted from D. melanogaster cn; ry42 and D. virilis embryos. In the presence of hobo transposase, the predominant excision sites were identical in both species, having breakpoints at the hobo termini with an inverted duplication of proximal insertion site DNA. However, in the absence of hobo transposase in D. virilis, excision breakpoints were apparently random and occurred distal to the hobo termini. The data indicate that hobo is capable of functioning in the soma during embryogenesis, and that its mobility is unrestricted in drosophilids. Furthermore, drosophilids not containing hobo are able to mobilize hobo, presumably by a hobo-related cross-mobilizing system. The cross-mobilizing system in D. virilis is not functionally identical to hobo with respect to excision sequence specificity.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Mol Gen Genet
          Molecular & general genetics : MGG
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          0026-8925
          0026-8925
          May 20 1995
          : 247
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Insect Attractants, Behavior and Basic Biology Research Laboratory, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Gainesville, Florida 32608, USA.
          Article
          10.1007/BF00293140
          7770046
          2e080eb1-555f-421c-8c02-d27423cd1945
          History

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