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The important contribution of transposable elements to phenotypic variation and evolution

Nathan S. Catlin, Emily B. Josephs

2021Current Opinion in Plant Biology81 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Transposable elements (TEs) are responsible for significant genomic variation in plants. Our understanding of the evolutionary forces shaping TE polymorphism has lagged behind other mutations because of the difficulty of accurately identifying TE polymorphism in short-read population genomic data. However, new approaches allow us to quantify TE polymorphisms in population datasets and address fundamental questions about the evolution of these polymorphisms. Here, we discuss how insertional biases shape where, when, and how often TEs insert throughout the genome. Next, we examine mechanisms by which TEs can affect phenotype. Finally, we evaluate current evidence for selection on TE polymorphisms. All together, it is clear that TEs are important, but underappreciated, contributors to intraspecific phenotypic variation, and that understanding the dynamics governing TE polymorphism is crucial for evolutionary biologists interested in the maintenance of variation.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyTransposable elementEvolutionary biologyGenomePopulation genomicsVariation (astronomy)GeneticsIntraspecific competitionPhenotypeEvolutionary dynamicsGenome evolutionPopulationBalancing selectionGenomicsHuman evolutionary geneticsGenetic variationGeneEcologyAstrophysicsPhysicsDemographySociologyChromosomal and Genetic VariationsGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesPlant Disease Resistance and Genetics