Doppia (
Dop) transposable elements were first identified from element termini found in the upstream portions of certain alleles of the
pl1 and
r1 loci of maize. At the
r1 locus, these
Dop end sequences are present in a region called

, which functions as the promoter for the
S genes of the
R-r haplotype, and which is required for efficient epigenetic modification of the
S genes during paramutation. In order to better understand the significance of the
Dop element sequences at
R-r, and to investigate the
Dop-encoded products that might regulate
r1 genes in this haplotype, we have cloned a more complete
Dop element,
Dop4. The
Dop4 element can encode two proteins that have strong sequence similarity to the TnpA and TnpD proteins of the well characterized maize transposable element
En/Spm. The DOPA protein, which is similar to TnpA of
En/Spm, is shown to bind to short, subterminal repeat motifs located in the Dop element ends. Like TnpA, DOPA promotes intermolecular associations between DNA molecules. In contrast to the activity of TnpA, which is a transcriptional repressor of
En/Spm, DOPA activates expression of reporter genes driven by either the Dop promoter or

in transient expression assays.
DNA transposable elements - DNA-protein interaction - DOPA -
Doppia
- maize