0% found this document useful (0 votes)
854 views7 pages

Transposons

Transposons are mobile segments of DNA that can move within genomes. They do not have their own origin of replication, so they are replicated as part of the host DNA. There are two major types: insertion sequences (IS), which are short DNA segments that contain inverted repeats and encode transposase; and transposons, which are larger but also contain inverted repeats and encode transposase to facilitate movement within genomes. Transposition is important for evolution and genetic analysis.

Uploaded by

Stephen Moore
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
854 views7 pages

Transposons

Transposons are mobile segments of DNA that can move within genomes. They do not have their own origin of replication, so they are replicated as part of the host DNA. There are two major types: insertion sequences (IS), which are short DNA segments that contain inverted repeats and encode transposase; and transposons, which are larger but also contain inverted repeats and encode transposase to facilitate movement within genomes. Transposition is important for evolution and genetic analysis.

Uploaded by

Stephen Moore
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Transposons

Mobile DNA: Transposons


Mobile DNA refers to discrete segments of DNA that move as
units from one location to another within other DNA molecules
They are always found inserted into another DNA molecule
such as a plasmid, a chromosome, or a viral genome.
Transposable elements do not possess their own origin of
replication. Instead, they are replicated when the host DNA
molecule into which they are inserted is replicated.
Transposable elements move by a process called transposition
that is important both in evolution and in genetic analysis. (1
in 1000 to 1 in 10,000,000 per generation)
The two major types of transposable elements in Bacteria are
insertion sequences (IS) and transposons.
Both elements have two important features in common:
They carry genes encoding transposase, the enzyme necessary for
transposition, and they have short inverted terminal repeats at their
ends that are also needed for transposition.

Insertion sequences are the simplest


type of transposable element. They are
short DNA segments, about 1000
nucleotides long, and typically contain
inverted repeats of 1050 bp.
Each different IS has a specific number of
base pairs in its terminal repeats. The only
gene they possess is for the transposase.
Several hundred distinct IS elements have
been characterized.

IS2 is an insertion sequence of 1327


bp with inverted repeats of 41 bp at
its ends.

Transposons are larger than IS elements, but have the


same two essential components: inverted repeats at both
ends and a gene that encodes transposase.
The transposase recognizes the inverted repeats and
moves the segment of DNA flanked by them from one site
to another. Consequently, any DNA that lies between the
two inverted repeats is moved and is, in effect, part of the
transposon.
Some transposons (Conjugative Tn ) are capable of moving
to another bacteria through conjugation
Composite Tn : As in the case of Mu virus the genome itself
act as an Tn. The whole structure can move as single unit.

Significance of transposition:
Evolution
Mutation

You might also like