Summary
Two P-elements (bif1 and bif2) were isolated from a genomic library ofDrosophila bifasciata. Both elements are internally deleted and have lost the coding capacity for a functional transposase. One of the elements (bif2) contains an insert consisting of a repetitive sequence. The terminal inverted repeats and the segments necessary for passive mobility are well conserved. Element bif2 has retained rudiments of the coding sequence of exon 0 and exon 3, but the reading frame is destroyed by insertions and deletions. The comparison of theD. bifasciata P-elements with P-elements ofDrosophila melanogaster andDrosophila nebulosa reveals that the two latter sequences are more similar to each other than either of them is to theD. bifasciata elements. This finding contradicts the phylogenetic relationship of the species and can be taken as an indirect but unequivocal evidence for recent horizontal gene transfer from a relative ofD. nebulosa to the gene pool ofD. melanogaster. The P-elements ofD. bifasciata are phylogenetically ancient and have evolved independently for about 50 million years. A higher substitution rate at the third codon position as well as a predominance of conservative replacements at the amino acid level indicates that the P-elements ofD. bifasciata have been under selective constraint over a long period and that immobilization has occurred only recently.
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Hagemann, S., Miller, W.J. & Pinsker, W. P-related sequences inDrosophila bifasciata: A molecular clue to the understanding of P-element evolution in the genusDrosophila . J Mol Evol 31, 478–484 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02102074
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02102074