نتایج جستجو برای: synonymous

تعداد نتایج: 8033  

2013
Zhenpeng Li

In genetics, the Ka/Ks ratio is the ratio of the number of non-synonymous substitutions per non-synonymous site (Ka) to the number of synonymous substitutions per synonymous site (Ks)[1]. Ka/Ks ratio was used as an indicator of selective pressure acting on a protein-coding gene. A Ka/Ks ratio of 1 indicates neutral selection, i.e., the observed ratio of non-synonymous mutations versus synonymou...

Journal: :Proceedings. AMIA Symposium 2002
Hong Yu Vasileios Hatzivassiloglou Carol Friedman Andrey Rzhetsky W. John Wilbur

Genes and proteins are often associated with multiple names, and more names are added as new functional or structural information is discovered. Because authors often alternate between these synonyms, information retrieval and extraction benefits from identifying these synonymous names. We have developed a method to extract automatically synonymous gene and protein names from MEDLINE and journa...

1999
Mamoru Kato Akira Suyama

In unicellular organisms, synonymous codon bias is correlated with the level of gene expression [1]. The codon bias becomes stronger in genes with higher expression levels. It becomes weaker but still remains in genes with lower expression levels. The bias means that synonymous codons are not used at random. In highly expressed genes, the synonymous codon usage is mainly determined by an abunda...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2016
Deepa Agashe Mrudula Sane Kruttika Phalnikar Gaurav D Diwan Alefiyah Habibullah Norma Cecilia Martinez-Gomez Vinaya Sahasrabuddhe William Polachek Jue Wang Lon M Chubiz Christopher J Marx

Contrary to previous understanding, recent evidence indicates that synonymous codon changes may sometimes face strong selection. However, it remains difficult to generalize the nature, strength, and mechanism(s) of such selection. Previously, we showed that synonymous variants of a key enzyme-coding gene (fae) of Methylobacterium extorquens AM1 decreased enzyme production and reduced fitness dr...

2012
Yanhua Yang Keping Chen

We surveyed the substitution patterns in the ent-kaurenoic acid oxidase (KAO) gene in 11 species of Oryzeae with an outgroup in the Ehrhartoidaea. The synonymous and non-synonymous substitution rates showed a high positive correlation with each other, but were negatively correlated with codon usage bias and GC content at third codon positions. The substitution rate was heterogenous among lineag...

Journal: :Bioinformatics 2002
Matthew J. Gonzales Jonathan M. Dugan Robert W. Shafer

SUMMARY Direct PCR sequencing on genetic material containing allelic mixtures results in sequences containing ambiguous nucleotides. Because codons exhibiting allelic mixtures present evidence of evolutionary pressure, it is important to include this information in the assessment of codon synonymy. We developed a program, 'Synonymous-Nonsynonymous Mutation Rates between Sequences Containing Amb...

Journal: :PLoS Genetics 2008
Guillaume Cambray Didier Mazel

The evolutionary potential of a gene is constrained not only by the amino acid sequence of its product, but by its DNA sequence as well. The topology of the genetic code is such that half of the amino acids exhibit synonymous codons that can reach different subsets of amino acids from each other through single mutation. Thus, synonymous DNA sequences should access different regions of the prote...

Journal: :Bioinformatics 2008
Jacob A. Tennessen

MOTIVATION Functional divergence among proteins is often assumed to be strongly influenced by natural selection, as inferred from the ratio of non-synonymous nucleotide divergence (d(N)) to synonymous nucleotide divergence (d(S)). That is, the more a mutation changes protein function, the more likely it is to be either selected against or selectively favored, and because the d(N)/d(S) ratio is ...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2009
Yoshiyuki Suzuki Takashi Gojobori Sudhir Kumar

In detecting natural selection operating at the amino acid sequence level by comparing the rates of synonymous (r(S)) and nonsynonymous (r(N)) substitutions, the rates of synonymous and nonsynonymous mutations are assumed to be approximately the same. In reality, however, these rates may not be the same if different proportions of synonymous and nonsynonymous sites overlap with CpG dinucleotide...

Journal: :Cell 2014
Fran Supek Belén Miñana Juan Valcárcel Toni Gabaldón Ben Lehner

Synonymous mutations change the sequence of a gene without directly altering the sequence of the encoded protein. Here, we present evidence that these "silent" mutations frequently contribute to human cancer. Selection on synonymous mutations in oncogenes is cancer-type specific, and although the functional consequences of cancer-associated synonymous mutations may be diverse, they recurrently ...

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