Insertion of a chimeric retrotransposon sequence in mouse Axin1 locus causes metastable kinky tail phenotype

Abstract Background Transposable elements (TEs) make up > 50% of the human genome, and the majority of retrotransposon insertions are truncated and many are located in introns. However, the effects of retrotransposition on the host genes remain incompletely known. Results We report here that inse...

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Main Authors: Zhuqing Wang, Hayden McSwiggin, Simon J. Newkirk, Yue Wang, Daniel Oliver, Chong Tang, Sandy Lee, Shawn Wang, Shuiqiao Yuan, Huili Zheng, Ping Ye, Wenfeng An, Wei Yan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-05-01
Series:Mobile DNA
Subjects:
IAP
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13100-019-0162-7
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spelling doaj-a114b80c541d42219e52cc6f1489e7e42020-11-25T02:01:58ZengBMCMobile DNA1759-87532019-05-0110111210.1186/s13100-019-0162-7Insertion of a chimeric retrotransposon sequence in mouse Axin1 locus causes metastable kinky tail phenotypeZhuqing Wang0Hayden McSwiggin1Simon J. Newkirk2Yue Wang3Daniel Oliver4Chong Tang5Sandy Lee6Shawn Wang7Shuiqiao Yuan8Huili Zheng9Ping Ye10Wenfeng An11Wei Yan12Department of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada School of Medicine Center for Molecular MedicineDepartment of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada School of Medicine Center for Molecular MedicineDepartment of Pharmaceutical Sciences, South Dakota State UniversityDepartment of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada School of Medicine Center for Molecular MedicineDepartment of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada School of Medicine Center for Molecular MedicineDepartment of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada School of Medicine Center for Molecular MedicineDepartment of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada School of Medicine Center for Molecular MedicineDepartment of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada School of Medicine Center for Molecular MedicineDepartment of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada School of Medicine Center for Molecular MedicineDepartment of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada School of Medicine Center for Molecular MedicineAvera McKennan Hospital and University Health CenterDepartment of Pharmaceutical Sciences, South Dakota State UniversityDepartment of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Nevada School of Medicine Center for Molecular MedicineAbstract Background Transposable elements (TEs) make up > 50% of the human genome, and the majority of retrotransposon insertions are truncated and many are located in introns. However, the effects of retrotransposition on the host genes remain incompletely known. Results We report here that insertion of a chimeric L1 (cL1), but not IAP solo LTR, into intron 6 of Axin1 using CRIPSR/Cas9 induced the kinky tail phenotype with ~ 80% penetrance in heterozygous Axin cL1 mice. Both penetrant (with kinky tails) and silent (without kinky tails) Axin cL1 mice, regardless of sex, could transmit the phenotype to subsequent generations with similar penetrance (~ 80%). Further analyses revealed that a longer Axin1 transcript isoform containing partial cL1-targeted intron was present in penetrant, but absent in silent and wild type mice, and the production of this unique Axin1 transcript appeared to correlate with altered levels of an activating histone modification, H3K9ac. Conclusions The mechanism for Axin cL1 mice is different from those previously identified in mice with spontaneous retrotransposition of IAP, e.g., Axin Fu and A vy , both of which have been associated with DNA methylation changes. Our data suggest that Axin1 locus is sensitive to genetic and epigenetic alteration by retrotransposons and thus, ideally suited for studying the effects of new retrotransposition events on target gene function in mice.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13100-019-0162-7RetrotransposonCRISPR/Cas9LINE-1IAPMaLRAlternative splicing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhuqing Wang
Hayden McSwiggin
Simon J. Newkirk
Yue Wang
Daniel Oliver
Chong Tang
Sandy Lee
Shawn Wang
Shuiqiao Yuan
Huili Zheng
Ping Ye
Wenfeng An
Wei Yan
spellingShingle Zhuqing Wang
Hayden McSwiggin
Simon J. Newkirk
Yue Wang
Daniel Oliver
Chong Tang
Sandy Lee
Shawn Wang
Shuiqiao Yuan
Huili Zheng
Ping Ye
Wenfeng An
Wei Yan
Insertion of a chimeric retrotransposon sequence in mouse Axin1 locus causes metastable kinky tail phenotype
Mobile DNA
Retrotransposon
CRISPR/Cas9
LINE-1
IAP
MaLR
Alternative splicing
author_facet Zhuqing Wang
Hayden McSwiggin
Simon J. Newkirk
Yue Wang
Daniel Oliver
Chong Tang
Sandy Lee
Shawn Wang
Shuiqiao Yuan
Huili Zheng
Ping Ye
Wenfeng An
Wei Yan
author_sort Zhuqing Wang
title Insertion of a chimeric retrotransposon sequence in mouse Axin1 locus causes metastable kinky tail phenotype
title_short Insertion of a chimeric retrotransposon sequence in mouse Axin1 locus causes metastable kinky tail phenotype
title_full Insertion of a chimeric retrotransposon sequence in mouse Axin1 locus causes metastable kinky tail phenotype
title_fullStr Insertion of a chimeric retrotransposon sequence in mouse Axin1 locus causes metastable kinky tail phenotype
title_full_unstemmed Insertion of a chimeric retrotransposon sequence in mouse Axin1 locus causes metastable kinky tail phenotype
title_sort insertion of a chimeric retrotransposon sequence in mouse axin1 locus causes metastable kinky tail phenotype
publisher BMC
series Mobile DNA
issn 1759-8753
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract Background Transposable elements (TEs) make up > 50% of the human genome, and the majority of retrotransposon insertions are truncated and many are located in introns. However, the effects of retrotransposition on the host genes remain incompletely known. Results We report here that insertion of a chimeric L1 (cL1), but not IAP solo LTR, into intron 6 of Axin1 using CRIPSR/Cas9 induced the kinky tail phenotype with ~ 80% penetrance in heterozygous Axin cL1 mice. Both penetrant (with kinky tails) and silent (without kinky tails) Axin cL1 mice, regardless of sex, could transmit the phenotype to subsequent generations with similar penetrance (~ 80%). Further analyses revealed that a longer Axin1 transcript isoform containing partial cL1-targeted intron was present in penetrant, but absent in silent and wild type mice, and the production of this unique Axin1 transcript appeared to correlate with altered levels of an activating histone modification, H3K9ac. Conclusions The mechanism for Axin cL1 mice is different from those previously identified in mice with spontaneous retrotransposition of IAP, e.g., Axin Fu and A vy , both of which have been associated with DNA methylation changes. Our data suggest that Axin1 locus is sensitive to genetic and epigenetic alteration by retrotransposons and thus, ideally suited for studying the effects of new retrotransposition events on target gene function in mice.
topic Retrotransposon
CRISPR/Cas9
LINE-1
IAP
MaLR
Alternative splicing
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13100-019-0162-7
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