[HTML][HTML] Evolutionary dynamics between transposable elements and their host genomes: mechanisms of suppression and escape

MA Lawlor, CE Ellison - Current Opinion in Genetics & Development, 2023 - Elsevier
Transposable elements (TEs) are ubiquitous among eukaryotic species. Their evolutionary
persistence is likely due to a combination of tolerogenic, evasive/antagonistic, and …

Transposons contribute to the functional diversification of the head, gut, and ovary transcriptomes across Drosophila natural strains

M Coronado-Zamora, J González - Genome research, 2023 - genome.cshlp.org
Transcriptomes are dynamic, with cells, tissues, and body parts expressing particular sets of
transcripts. Transposable elements (TEs) are a known source of transcriptome diversity; …

Epigenetic targeting of transposon relics: beating the dead horses of the genome?

I Sammarco, J Pieters, S Salony, I Toman… - Epigenetics, 2022 - Taylor & Francis
Transposable elements (TEs) have been seen as selfish genetic elements that can
propagate in a host genome. Their propagation success is however hindered by a …

Regulatory logic of endogenous RNAi in silencing de novo genomic conflicts

J Vedanayagam, CJ Lin, R Papareddy, M Nodine… - Plos …, 2023 - journals.plos.org
Although the biological utilities of endogenous RNAi (endo-RNAi) have been largely
elusive, recent studies reveal its critical role in the non-model fruitfly Drosophila simulans to …

Endogenous RNAi silences a burgeoning sex chromosome arms race

J Vedanayagam, CJ Lin, R Papareddy, M Nodine… - Biorxiv, 2022 - biorxiv.org
Although the biological utilities of endogenous RNAi (endo-RNAi) have been largely
elusive, recent studies reveal its critical role in the non-model fruitfly Drosophila simulans to …

Transposable elements in human diseases: evolutionary and therapeutic perspectives

K Shah, AC Berkyurek - 2022 - preprints.org
Transposable elements (TEs) ubiquitously exist in the human genome, and some have the
ability to copy and paste themselves to other locations, resulting in new insertions …