Nikolaj Junakovic
Sapienza University of Rome
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Featured researches published by Nikolaj Junakovic.
Chromosoma | 1984
Nikolaj Junakovic; Roberto Caneva; Paola Ballario
The genomic location of five copia-like transposable elements has been compared by the Southern technique in laboratory lines of Oregon R and Canton S strains of Drosophila melanogaster. The results show that extensive rearrangements have taken place in the few decades of separation between the stocks and suggest that transposition occurs at a sizable rate.
Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1998
Nikolaj Junakovic; Alessandro Terrinoni; Carmen Di Franco; Cristina Vieira; Catherine Loevenbruck
Abstract. The elements of the transposon families G, copia, mdg 1, 412, and gypsy that are located in the heterochromatin and on the Y chromosome have been identified by the Southern blotting technique in Drosophila simulans and D. melanogaster populations. Within species, the abundance of such elements differs between transposon families. Between species, the abundance in the heterochromatin and on the Y chromosome of the elements of the same family can differ greatly suggesting that differences within a species are unrelated to structural features of elements. By shedding some new light on the mechanism of accumulation of transposable elements in the heterochromatin, these data appear relevant to the understanding of the long-term interaction between transposable elements and the host genome.
Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1986
Nikolaj Junakovic; Carmen Di Franco; Paolo Barsanti; Gioacchino Palumbo
SummaryFour males of an isogenic gt waDrosophila line were heat shocked and then crossed with isogenic untreated females. The genomic distributions of the elements of five copia-like families were analyzed in the four F1 flies by the Southern technique and compared with those in the untreated isogenic line. The pattern heterogeneity observed in the F1 samples shows that extensive rearrangements can be induced by heat shock.
Chromosoma | 1989
Carmen Di Franco; Claudio Pisano; Patrizio Dimitri; Silvia Gigliotti; Nikolaj Junakovic
The genomic distribution of elements of the copia, 412, B 104, mdg 1, mdg 4 and 1731 transposon families was compared by the Southern technique in DNA preparations extracted from brains, salivary glands and adult flies of two related Drosophila lines. The copia, 412 and mdg 1 sequences were also probed in DNA from sperm, embryos, and 1st and 2nd instar larvae. The homogeneity of the patterns observed shows that somatic transposition is unlikely to occur frequently. A correlation between mobility and the euchromatic or heterochromatic location of transposable elements is discussed. In addition, an explanation of the variable band intensities of transposable elements in Southern autoradiographs is proposed.
Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1997
Alessandro Terrinoni; Carmen Di Franco; Patrizio Dimitri; Nikolaj Junakovic
The intragenomic location of the elements of the I, G, jockey, F, and Doc transposon families has been studied by the Southern blot analysis, in 12 laboratory Drosophila melanogaster stocks. Elements located in euchromatin, heterochromatin, and on the Y chromosome are identified, and their stability has been assessed by comparing the autoradiographs detected in different stocks and analysis of individual flies. Evidence is shown suggesting that preferential location in euchromatin or heterochromatin and the distribution within heterochromatin are distinctive of transposon families. Elements located in heterochromatin can be unstable. These results are discussed in the context of the relationship between transposable elements and the host genome.
Genetica | 1992
C. Di Franco; Claudio Pisano; F. Fourcade-Peronnet; Guy Echalier; Nikolaj Junakovic
The genomic distribution and the number of elements of eleven transposon families have been compared by the Southern technique between permanent cultured cells, larval salivary glands and the brains and whole flies of an inbred Drosophila line (inb-c) from which the cells were established. In cultured cells, changes in restriction patterns consistent with various types of rearrangements such as amplification, transposition and excision of the elements of copia, 1731, 412, 297 and mdg-4 transposon families are detected whereas B 104, G and blood elements appear stable. In previous reports these rearrangements were not detected among individuals of the inb-c line or among samples of somatic tissues, or in samples spanning years of maintenance of cultured cells. Hence, we believe that they have been induced de novo during the passage to the cell culture.
Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1986
Nikolaj Junakovic; Vincenzo Angelucci
SummaryThe genomic distributions of the copia, 297, 412, mdg 1, and B 104 transposable elements have been compared by the Southern technique among two Oregon R and four Canton SDrosophila laboratory lines that have been maintained separately for defined periods of a few years. The heterogeneity of the autoradiographic patterns suggests that multiple transposition events have occurred during the time of separation. The hypothesis that transposition could be induced by, variations of environmental parameters is discussed.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Roberta Moschetti; Patrizio Dimitri; Ruggiero Caizzi; Nikolaj Junakovic
Retrotranspostion of I factors in the female germline of Drosophila melanogaster is responsible for the so called I-R hybrid dysgenesis, a phenomenon that produces a broad spectrum of genetic abnormalities including reduced fertility, increased frequency of mutations and chromosome loss. Transposition of I factor depends on cellular conditions that are established in the oocytes of the reactive females and transmitted to their daughters. The so-called reactivity is a cellular state that may exhibit variable levels of expression and represents a permissive condition for I transposition at high levels. Defective I elements have been proposed to be the genetic determinants of reactivity and, through their differential expression, to modulate transposition of active copies in somatic and/or germ line cells. Recently, control of transposable element activity in the germ line has been found to depend on pi-RNAs, small repressive RNAs interacting with Piwi-family proteins and derived from larger transposable elements (TE)-derived primary transcripts. In particular, maternally transmitted I-element piRNAs originating from the 42AB region of polytene chromosomes were found to be involved in control of I element mobility. In the present work, we use a combination of cytological and molecular approaches to study the activity of I elements in three sublines of the inducer y; cn bw; sp isogenic strain and in dysgenic and non-dysgenic genetic backgrounds. Overall, the results of FISH and Southern blotting experiments clearly show that I elements are highly unstable in the Montpellier subline in the absence of classical dysgenic conditions. Such instability appears to be correlated to the amount of 5′ and 3′ I element transcripts detected by quantitative and real-time RT-PCR. The results of this study indicate that I elements can be highly active in the absence of a dysgenic crosses. Moreover, in the light of our results caution should be taken to assimilate the genomic annotation data on transposable elements to all y; cn bw sp sublines.
Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1998
Fabienne Chalvet; Carmen Di Franco; Alessandro Terrinoni; Alain Pélisson; Nikolaj Junakovic; Alain Bucheton
Gypsy is an endogenous retrovirus present in the genome of Drosophila melanogaster. This element is mobilized only in the progeny of females which contain active gypsy elements and which are homozygous for permissive alleles of a host gene called flamenco (flam). Some data strongly suggest that gypsy elements bearing a diagnostic HindIII site in the central region of the retrovirus body represent a subfamily that appears to be much more active than elements devoid of this site. We have taken advantage of this structural difference to assess by the Southern blotting technique the genomic distribution of active gypsy elements. In some of the laboratory Drosophila stocks tested, active gypsy elements were found to be restricted to the Y chromosome. Further analyses of 14 strains tested for the permissive vs. restrictive status of their flamenco alleles suggest that the presence of permissive alleles of flam in a stock tends to be associated with the confinement of active gypsy elements to the Y chromosome. This might be the result of the female-specific effect of flamenco on gypsy activity.
Plasmid | 1984
Nikolaj Junakovic; Paola Ballario
We find that in the circular extrachromosomal DNA from Drosophila tissue culture cells the transposable elements copia, 412, 297, and mdg 1 are present in variable amounts. There is no detectable circular DNA homologous to B104 . From the relationship between the intra- and extrachromosomal forms it appears that the amount of different circular elements is not related to the amount of the respective chromosomal elements.