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Transposable element evolution in plant genome ecosystems

M. Pulido, Josep Casacuberta

2023Current Opinion in Plant Biology53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The relationship of transposable elements (TEs) with their host genomes has usually been seen as an arms race between TEs and their host genomes. Consequently, TEs are supposed to amplify by bursts of transposition, when the TE escapes host surveillance, followed by long periods of TE quiescence and efficient host control. Recent data obtained from an increasing number of assembled plant genomes and resequencing population datasets show that TE dynamics is more complex and varies among TE families and their host genomes. This variation ranges from large genomes that accommodate large TE populations to genomes that are very active in TE elimination, and from inconspicuous elements with very low activity to elements with high transposition and elimination rates. The dynamics of each TE family results from a long history of interaction with the host in a genome populated by many other TE families, very much like an evolving ecosystem.

Topics & Concepts

Transposable elementGenomeBiologyTransposition (logic)Host (biology)Evolutionary biologyPopulationGenome evolutionGeneticsGeneDemographyPhilosophyLinguisticsSociologyChromosomal and Genetic VariationsPlant Disease Resistance and GeneticsGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies