نتایج جستجو برای: synonymous codon usage bias

تعداد نتایج: 229401  

2017
Paweł Błażej Dorota Mackiewicz Małgorzata Wnętrzak Paweł Mackiewicz

There are two main forces that affect usage of synonymous codons: directional mutational pressure and selection. The effectiveness of protein translation is usually considered as the main selectional factor. However, biased codon usage can also be a byproduct of a general selection at the amino acid level interacting with nucleotide replacements. To evaluate the validity and strength of such an...

Journal: :Genetics 2009
Kai Zeng Brian Charlesworth

Codon usage bias is the nonrandom use of synonymous codons for the same amino acid. Most population genetic models of codon usage evolution assume that the population is at mutation-selection-drift equilibrium. Natural populations, however, frequently deviate from equilibrium, often because of recent demographic changes. Here, we construct a matrix model that includes the effects of a recent ch...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2013
Xiaoyan Sun Qun Yang Xuhua Xia

The effective number of codons (N(c)) is a widely used index for characterizing codon usage bias because it does not require a set of reference genes as does codon adaptation index (CAI) and because of the freely available computational tools such as CodonW. However, N(c), as originally formulated has many problems. For example, it can have values far greater than the number of sense codons; it...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 1993
D H Fitch L D Strausbaugh

We have evaluated codon usage bias in Drosophila histone genes and have obtained the nucleotide sequence of a 5,161-bp D. hydei histone gene repeat unit. This repeat contains genes for all five histone proteins (H1, H2a, H2b, H3, and H4) and differs from the previously reported one by a second EcoRI site. These D. hydei repeats have been aligned to each other and to the 5.0-kb (i.e., long) and ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1981
T Miyata H Hayashida

Comparisons of nucleotide sequences of several pseudogenes described to date, including alpha- and beta-globin and immunoglobulin kappa-type variable domain pseudogenes, with those of functional counterparts revealed that pseudogenes accumulate mutations at an extremely high rate uniformly over their entirety. It is remarkable that the evolutionary rate exceeds the rate of changes between synon...

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: :Molecular cell 2016
Florian Buhr Sujata Jha Michael Thommen Joerg Mittelstaet Felicitas Kutz Harald Schwalbe Marina V Rodnina Anton A Komar

In all genomes, most amino acids are encoded by more than one codon. Synonymous codons can modulate protein production and folding, but the mechanism connecting codon usage to protein homeostasis is not known. Here we show that synonymous codon variants in the gene encoding gamma-B crystallin, a mammalian eye-lens protein, modulate the rates of translation and cotranslational folding of protein...

Journal: :Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 2022

Non-random usage of synonymous codons, known as “codon bias”, has been described in many organisms, from bacteria to Drosophila, but little is about it phytoplankton. This phenomenon thought be driven by selection for translational efficiency. As the efficacy proportional effective population size, species with large sizes, such phytoplankton, are expected have strong codon bias. To test this, ...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2002
Gabriel Marais Gwenaël Piganeau

According to population genetics models, genomic regions with lower crossing-over rates are expected to experience less effective selection because of Hill-Robertson interference (HRi). The effect of genetic linkage is thought to be particularly important for a selection of weak intensity such as selection affecting codon usage. Consistent with this model, codon bias correlates positively with ...

2011
Nutan Chauhan Ambarish Sharan Vidyarthi Raju Poddar

Multivariate analysis of codon and amino acid usage was performed for three Leishmania species, including L. donovani, L. infantum and L. major. It was revealed that all three species are under mutational bias and translational selection. Lower GC12 and higher GC3S in all three parasites suggests that the ancestral highly expressed genes (HEGs), compared to lowly expressed genes (LEGs), might h...

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