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Orangutans may 'host ancient jumping genes'
May 8, 6:14 pm
Washington, May 8 (ANI): Modern-day orangutans are host to ancient jumping genes dubbed Alu, which are over 16 million years old, according to a new study.These tiny pieces of mobile DNA are able to copy themselves using a method similar to retroviruses. They can be thought of as molecular fossils, as a shared Alu element sequence and location within the genome indicates a common ancestor. But, because this is an inexact process, a segment of "host" DNA is duplicated at the Alu insertion sites and these footprints, known as target site duplications, can be used to identify Alu insertions."However, it has long been recognized that only a small fraction of these elements retain the ability to mobilize new copies as 'drivers,' while most are inactive," said Mark Batzer, Boyd Professor and Dr. Mary Lou Applewhite Distinguished Professor of Biological Sciences. "In humans, telling the difference has proven quite difficult, mainly because the human genome is filled with plenty of relatively young Alu insertions, all with slight differences while at the same time lacking easily identifiable features characteristic for Alu propagation. "This makes it hard to find their 'parent' or 'source Alu' from potentially hundreds of candidates that look similar."In contrast to humans and other studied primates, recent activity of Alu elements in the orangutan has been very slow, with only a handful of recent events by comparison. "In the current study, we were able to discover the likely source Alu, or founder, of some of the very recent Alu insertions unique to the orangutan. This is significant for many reasons," said research associate Jerilyn Walker. "First, this study represents only the second study that identified a driver Alu element. In addition, this driver is more than 16 million years old!"nalysis of DNA sequences has found over a million Alu elements within each primate genome, many of which are species specific: 5,000 are unique to humans, while 2,300 others are exclusive to chimpanzees. In contrast, the orangutan lineage (Sumatran and Bornean orangutans) only has 250 specific Alu. Even though the Alu discovered in this study is old enough to be shared in human, chimpanzee, gorilla and orangutan genomes, its primary "jumping" has been in orangutans."Furthermore, this ancient 'backseat driver' created several daughter elements over the course of several millions years and a relatively young daughter element (found only in Sumatran orangutans and absent from Bornean orangutans) also appears to mobilize and has created offspring Alu copies of itself," said assistant professor Miriam Konkel. This is promising new evidence that Alu propagation may be 'waking up' in
orangutans.The study has been published in open access journal Mobile DNA
. (ANI)
How exposure to social stress early in life ups breast cancer risk
Jun 19, 10:47 am
Washington, June 19 (ANI): Local chemical signals released by fat cells in the mammary gland appear to provide a crucial link between exposure to unrelenting social stressors early in life, and the subsequent development of breast cancer, according to researchers from the University of Chicago.
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Older males make better fathers
Jun 19, 10:37 am
Washington, June 19 (ANI): Researchers at the University of Exeter have revealed that that older male burying beetles make better fathers than their younger counterparts.
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Herbal extract used for stress relief also boosts lifespan
Jun 19, 9:55 am
Washington, June 19 (ANI): UC Irvine researchers have found that the herbal extract of a yellow-flowered mountain plant long used for stress relief increases the lifespan of fruit fly populations by an average of 24 percent.
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One-billion-year-old water ' saltier than seawater'
Jun 19, 9:49 am
Melbourne, June 19 (ANI): University of Toronto scientists have found pockets of water that had been sitting 2.4 kilometres underneath the Earth's surface for more than a billion years.
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