Dissertação
O elemento transponível mariner e o acúmulo de transposição somática no desenvolvimento de Drosophila
Fecha
2017-03-20Autor
Pereira, Camila de Moura
Institución
Resumen
Transposable elements (TEs) are sequences of DNA with the ability to move inside host
genomes. Some TEs are able to transpose into somatic tissues, process called Somatic
Transposition (ST) that can be involved with aging, neurodegenerative diseases and cancer.
The mariner element is a TE able to move in both somatic cells and germline. A nonautonomous
mariner was discovered as a cause of the white-peach mutation in Drosophila eyes.
The insertion of this element in the promoter region of the white gene leads to flies with peach
colored eyes. In the presence of autonomous copies, the mariner in the white gene can
transpose, reversing the mutation and leading to flies with mosaic phenotype (white-peach
colored eyes with red spots). This model makes possible to measure the rate of ST by the
number of red spots in mosaic flies, because every spot represents an excision event and as a
consequence, a ST event. In this study, we used mild heat stress to induce mariner transposition
through different stages of D. simulans white-peach test development in order to verify if ST
events accumulate in Drosophila. The mariner ST was not constant during the development:
the larval stage showed the higher ST rates; pupal stage exhibited less than larval; and
transposition was not detected during the embryogenesis. The development stage and the
cellular process involved in this period can affect mariner transposition: more intense cell
division phases may facilitate it. ST accumulation does not occur linearly, but it may vary by
the stages with highest or lowest transposition. The mariner activation under thermal stress was
confirmed by qPCR that indicated twice as high rates of ST in the larval stage at 28ºC. Besides,
these analyses also showed an accumulation of ST throughout the development.