Laboratory Animal and Comparative Medicine ›› 2025, Vol. 45 ›› Issue (6): 676-687.DOI: 10.12300/j.issn.1674-5817.2025.112

• Invertebrate Laboratory Animal: Fruit fly • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Drosophila melanogaster Transposons: Characterization, Regulation, and Their Role in Genome Evolution

WANG Ye, WANG Lu()()   

  1. Key Laboratory of RNA Innovation, Science and Engineering, Center for Excellence in Molecular Cell Science/Shanghai Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200031, China
  • Received:2025-07-07 Revised:2025-08-12 Online:2025-12-25 Published:2025-12-19
  • Contact: WANG Lu

Abstract:

Transposable elements (TEs) are mobile DNA sequences in genomes that play key roles in species evolution, genome stability, and gene regulation. Drosophila melanogaster, as a classic model animal with TEs accounting for approximately 20% of its genome, is an ideal model for studying biological characteristics, host defense mechanisms, and functional evolution of TEs, and also provides an important paradigm for understanding mechanisms of TE-related diseases in higher organisms and even humans. This review systematically elucidates the classification and distribution characteristics of TEs in D. melanogaster and their dynamic interactions with host genome, focusing on the host defense system centered on PIWI-interacting RNA (piRNA) pathway. Then, the biological characteristics of key TE families (such as Gypsy, Copia, P-element, and I-element) in D. melanogaster and their dual roles in genomic evolution are analyzed in detail. On the one hand, TE insertions can cause genomic instability, heterozygous sterility, and aging phenotypes, providing a model basis for studying related human diseases (e.g., neurodegenerative diseases, genomic instability syndromes, etc.). On the other hand, their sequences can be co-opted by the host to create novel regulatory elements or functional genes, thereby driving adaptive innovation. Finally, the future research directions of TEs are proposed, including regulation of TE activity by environmental stress, interaction between piRNA pathways and other small RNA systems, as well as regulatory effects of TEs in the occurrence and development of aging and neurodegenerative diseases. The research on TEs in D. melanogaster not only deepens understanding of TE biology, but also provides a key theoretical basis and important inspiration for studying human diseases using experimental animal models, as well as for developing gene therapy and gene editing technologies.

Key words: Drosophila melanogaster, Transposable elements, piRNA, Functional evolution

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