Evolutionary genomics of transposable elements in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Martin Carr, Douda Bensasson, Casey M. Bergman

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive analysis of transposable element evolution in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, revealing new families, underestimated copy numbers, and the role of horizontal transfer in shaping TE diversity.
Contribution
It offers a reannotation of Ty elements, identifies a new Ty3-like family, and demonstrates horizontal transfer's role in TE evolution in yeast.
Findings
Previous annotations underestimated Ty copy numbers.
Identified a new Ty3-like family related to S. paradoxus.
Active Ty families are mostly polymorphic, inactive ones are fixed.
Abstract
Saccharomyces cerevisiae is one of the premier model systems for studying the genomics and evolution of transposable elements. The availability of the S. cerevisiae genome led to many insights into its five known transposable element families (Ty1-Ty5) in the years shortly after its completion. However, subsequent advances in bioinformatics tools for analysing transposable elements and the recent availability of genome sequences for multiple strains and species of yeast motivates new investigations into Ty evolution in S. cerevisiae. Here we provide a comprehensive phylogenetic and population genetic analysis of Ty families in S. cerevisiae based on a reannotation of Ty elements in the S288c reference genome. We show that previous annotation efforts have underestimated the total copy number of Ty elements for all known families. In addition, we identify a new family of Ty3-like elements…
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