Biology (Sep 2021)

Diversity and Evolution of <i>pogo</i> and <i>Tc1/mariner</i> Transposons in the Apoidea Genomes

  • Yibing Liu,
  • Wencheng Zong,
  • Mohamed Diaby,
  • Zheguang Lin,
  • Saisai Wang,
  • Bo Gao,
  • Ting Ji,
  • Chengyi Song

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biology10090940
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. 940

Abstract

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Bees (Apoidea), the largest and most crucial radiation of pollinators, play a vital role in the ecosystem balance. Transposons are widely distributed in nature and are important drivers of species diversity. However, transposons are rarely reported in important pollinators such as bees. Here, we surveyed 37 bee genomesin Apoidea, annotated the pogo and Tc1/mariner transposons in the genome of each species, and performed a phylogenetic analysis and determined their overall distribution. The pogo and Tc1/mariner families showed high diversity and low abundance in the 37 species, and their proportion was significantly higher in solitary bees than in social bees. DD34D/mariner was found to be distributed in almost all species and was found in Apis mellifera, Apis mellifera carnica, Apis mellifera caucasia, and Apis mellifera mellifera, and Euglossa dilemma may still be active. Using horizontal transfer analysis, we found that DD29-30D/Tigger may have experienced horizontal transfer (HT) events. The current study displayed the evolution profiles (including diversity, activity, and abundance) of the pogo and Tc1/mariner transposons across 37 species of Apoidea. Our data revealed their contributions to the genomic variations across these species and facilitated in understanding of the genome evolution of this lineage.

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