Evolutionarily conserved regions in Caenorhabditis transposable elements deduced by sequence comparison
In this paper we present the sequence of an intact Caenorhabditis briggsae transposable element, Tcb2. Tcb2 is 1606 base pairs in length and contains 80 base pair imperfect terminal repeats and a single open reading frame. We have identified blocks of T-rich repeats in the regions 150–200 and 1421–1476 of this element which are conserved in the Caenorhabditis elegans element Tc1. The sequence conservation of these regions in elements from different Caenorhabditis species suggests that they are of functional importance. A single open reading frame corresponding to the major open reading frame of Tc1 is conserved among Tc1, Tcb1, and Tcb2. Comparison of the first 550 nucleotides of the sequence among the three elements has allowed the evaluation of a model proposing an extension of the major open reading frame. Our data support the suggestion that Tc1 is capable of producing a 335 amino acid protein. A comparison of the sequence coding for the amino and carboxy termini of the 273 amino acid transposase from Caenorhabditis Tc1-like elements and Drosophila HB1 showed different amounts of divergence for each of these regions, indicating that the two functional domains have undergone different amounts of selection. Our data are not compatible with the proposal that Tc1-related sequences have been acquired via horizontal transmission. The divergence of Tc1 from the two C. briggsae elements, Tcb1 and Tcb2, indicated that all three elements have been diverging from each other for approximately the same amount of time as the genomes of the two species.Key words: Caenorhabditis, transposable element, sequence comparison.