
Transposons and the Dynamic Genome
Springer (Publisher)
Published on 17. July 2009
Book
Hardback
XV, 184 pages
978-3-642-02004-9 (ISBN)
Description
It will be some time beforewe see Relax, there's nothing wrong with the "slime, protoplasm, &c. "generating transpositionpaper. People aren't a new animal. ButI have long readyforthisyet. Istopped publishing regretted that I truckled to public in refereed journals in 1965 because opinion,andusedthePentateuchal therewas nointerest in themaize term of creation,by which I really controlling elements. meant "appeared" by some wholly Barbara McClintockto Mel Green, unknownprocess. It is mere rubbish, 1969 thinking at presentof theorigin of life; onemight as well think of the originof matter. Charles Darwin to James D. Hooker, March29, 1863 Sometimes my students and others have asked me: "what was ?rst in evo- tion - retroviruses or retrotransposons?" Since HowardTemin proposed that retrovirusesevolvedfromretrotransposons(Temin1980;Teminetal. 1995)the other alternative that retroviruses emerged ?rst and were the predecessors of LTR-retrotransposons has since been a controversial issue (Terzian et al. , this BOOK). While DNA-transposons could not have existed in an ancestral R- world by de?nition, sure enough, some arguments de?nitely point towards apre-DNAworldscenarioinwhichretroelementswerethedirectdescendants of the earliest replicators representing the emergence of life.
First, these rep- cators likely catalyzed their own or other's replication cycles via the catalytic properties of RNA molecules. After translation had emerged some replicators possibly encoded an RNA polymerase ?rst. This later evolved into reverse transcriptase(RT),i. e. themostprominentkey-factoratthetransitionintothe DNA world. Simultaneously, replicators could also have encoded membrane protein-genessuchastheenvgeneofrecentDNA-proviruses. Membraneswere likely present muchearlier as prebioticoily ?lms that supported theevolution of a prebiotic-protometabolism (Dyson 1999; Grif?ths 2007).
First, these rep- cators likely catalyzed their own or other's replication cycles via the catalytic properties of RNA molecules. After translation had emerged some replicators possibly encoded an RNA polymerase ?rst. This later evolved into reverse transcriptase(RT),i. e. themostprominentkey-factoratthetransitionintothe DNA world. Simultaneously, replicators could also have encoded membrane protein-genessuchastheenvgeneofrecentDNA-proviruses. Membraneswere likely present muchearlier as prebioticoily ?lms that supported theevolution of a prebiotic-protometabolism (Dyson 1999; Grif?ths 2007).
More details
Series
Edition
2009 ed.
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Publishing group
Springer Berlin
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Research
Illustrations
XV, 184 p.
Dimensions
Height: 241 mm
Width: 160 mm
Thickness: 17 mm
Weight
508 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-642-02004-9 (9783642020049)
DOI
10.1007/978-3-642-02005-6
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Dirk-Henner Lankenau | Jean-Nicolas Volff
Transposons and the Dynamic Genome
Book
11/2011
Springer
€160.49
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Dirk-Henner Lankenau | Jean-Nicolas Volff
Transposons and the Dynamic Genome
E-Book
06/2009
1st Edition
Springer
€149.79
Available for download
Content
Theoretical Approaches to the Dynamics of Transposable Elements in Genomes, Populations, and Species.- Infra- and Transspecific Clues to Understanding the Dynamics of Transposable Elements.- Morphological Characters from the Genome: SINE Insertion Polymorphism and Phylogenies.- Genome Defense Against Transposable Elements and the Origins of Regulatory RNA.- When Drosophila Meets Retrovirology: The gypsy Case.- Transposon-Host Cell Interactions in the Regulation of Sleeping Beauty Transposition.- Interactions of Transposons with the Cellular DNA Repair Machinery.