TY - JOUR AU - Smaruj, Paulina AU - Kieliszek, Marek PY - 2023/01/05 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - Casposons – silent heroes of the CRISPR-Cas systems evolutionary history JF - EXCLI Journal JA - EXCLI J. VL - 22 IS - SE - Review articles DO - 10.17179/excli2022-5581 UR - https://www.excli.de/index.php/excli/article/view/5581 SP - 70-83 AB - <p class="Abstract"><span lang="EN-US">Many archaeal and bacterial organisms possess an adaptive immunity system known as CRISPR-Cas. Its role is to recognize and degrade foreign DNA showing high similarity to repeats within the CRISPR array. In recent years computational techniques have been used to identify <em>cas1</em> genes that are not associated with CRISPR systems, named <em>cas1-solo</em>. Often, <em>cas1-solo</em> genes are present in a conserved neighborhood of PolB-like polymerase genes, which is a characteristic feature of self-synthesizing, eukaryotic transposons of the Polinton class. Nearly all <em>cas1</em>-<em>polB</em> genomic islands are flanked by terminal inverted repeats and direct repeats which correspond to target site duplications. Considering the patchy taxonomic distribution of the identified islands in archaeal and bacterial genomes, they were characterized as a new superfamily of mobile genetic elements and called casposons. Here, we review recent experiments on casposons' mobility and discuss their discovery, classification, and evolutionary relationship with the CRISPR-Cas systems.<s></s></span></p> ER -