scholarly journals Analysis of synonymous codon usage patterns in sixty-four different bivalve species

PeerJ ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. e1520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Gerdol ◽  
Gianluca De Moro ◽  
Paola Venier ◽  
Alberto Pallavicini

Synonymous codon usage bias (CUB) is a defined as the non-random usage of codons encoding the same amino acid across different genomes. This phenomenon is common to all organisms and the real weight of the many factors involved in its shaping still remains to be fully determined. So far, relatively little attention has been put in the analysis of CUB in bivalve mollusks due to the limited genomic data available. Taking advantage of the massive sequence data generated from next generation sequencing projects, we explored codon preferences in 64 different species pertaining to the six major evolutionary lineages in Bivalvia. We detected remarkable differences across species, which are only partially dependent on phylogeny. While the intensity of CUB is mild in most organisms, a heterogeneous group of species (including Arcida and Mytilida, among the others) display higher bias and a strong preference for AT-ending codons. We show that the relative strength and direction of mutational bias, selection for translational efficiency and for translational accuracy contribute to the establishment of synonymous codon usage in bivalves. Although many aspects underlying bivalve CUB still remain obscure, we provide for the first time an overview of this phenomenon in this large, commercially and environmentally important, class of marine invertebrates.

2012 ◽  
Vol 60 (5) ◽  
pp. 461 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuerong Zhang ◽  
Xiaojun Nie ◽  
Xiaoou Jia ◽  
Cunzhen Zhao ◽  
Siddanagouda S. Biradar ◽  
...  

Codon usage patterns of 23 Poaceae chloroplast genomes were analysed in this study. Neutrality analysis indicated that the codon usage patterns have significant correlations with GC12 and GC3 and also showed strong bias towards a high representation of NNA and NNT codons. The Nc-plot showed that although a large proportion of points follow the parabolic line of trajectory, several genes with low ENc values lie below the expected curve, suggesting that mutational bias played a major role in the codon biology of the Poaceae chloroplast genome. Parity Rule 2 plot analysis showed that T was used more frequently than A in all the genomes. Correspondence analysis of relative synonymous codon usage indicated that the first axis explained only a partial amount of variation of codon usage. Furthermore, the gene length and expression level were also found to drive codon usage variation. These findings revealed that besides natural selection, other factors might also exert some influences in shaping the codon usage bias in Poaceae chloroplast genomes. The optimal codons of these 23 genomes were also identified in this study.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abigail L. Labella ◽  
Dana A. Opulente ◽  
Jacob L. Steenwyk ◽  
Chris Todd Hittinger ◽  
Antonis Rokas

AbstractVariation in synonymous codon usage is abundant across multiple levels of organization: between codons of an amino acid, between genes in a genome, and between genomes of different species. It is now well understood that variation in synonymous codon usage is influenced by mutational bias coupled with both natural selection for translational efficiency and genetic drift, but how these processes shape patterns of codon usage bias across entire lineages remains unexplored. To address this question, we used a rich genomic data set of 327 species that covers nearly one third of the known biodiversity of the budding yeast subphylum Saccharomycotina. We found that, while genome-wide relative synonymous codon usage (RSCU) for all codons was highly correlated with the GC content of the third codon position (GC3), the usage of codons for the amino acids proline, arginine, and glycine was inconsistent with the neutral expectation where mutational bias coupled with genetic drift drive codon usage. Examination between genes’ effective numbers of codons and their GC3 contents in individual genomes revealed that nearly a quarter of genes (381,174/1,683,203; 23%), as well as most genomes (308/327; 94%), significantly deviate from the neutral expectation. Finally, by evaluating the imprint of translational selection on codon usage, measured as the degree to which genes’ adaptiveness to the tRNA pool were correlated with selective pressure, we show that translational selection is widespread in budding yeast genomes (264/327; 81%). These results suggest that the contribution of translational selection and drift to patterns of synonymous codon usage across budding yeasts varies across codons, genes, and genomes; whereas drift is the primary driver of global codon usage across the subphylum, the codon bias of large numbers of genes in the majority of genomes is influenced by translational selection.Lay Summary / Significance statementSynonymous mutations in genes have no effect on the encoded proteins and were once thought to be evolutionarily neutral. By examining codon usage bias across codons, genes, and genomes of 327 species in the budding yeast subphylum, we show that synonymous codon usage is shaped by both neutral processes and selection for translational efficiency. Specifically, whereas codon usage bias for most codons appears to be strongly associated with mutational bias and largely driven by genetic drift across the entire subphylum, patterns of codon usage bias in a few codons, as well as in many genes in nearly all genomes of budding yeasts, deviate from neutral expectations. Rather, the synonymous codons used within genes in most budding yeast genomes are adapted to the tRNAs present within each genome, a result most likely due to translational selection that optimizes codons to match the tRNAs. Our results suggest that patterns of codon usage bias in budding yeasts, and perhaps more broadly in fungi and other microbial eukaryotes, are shaped by both neutral and selective processes.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manoj Kumar Yadav ◽  
Shivani Gajbhiye

AbstractCodon usage bias is a ubiquitous phenomenon occurring at both, interspecies and intraspecies level in different organisms. P. knowlesi, whose natural host is long-tailed Macaque monkeys, has recently started infecting humans as well. The genome as well as coding sequence data of P. knowlesi is used to understand their codon usage pattern in the light of other human infecting Plasmodium species: P. vivax and P. falciparum. The different codon usage indicators: GC content, relative synonymous codon usage, effective number of codon and codon adaptation index are studied to analyze codon usage in the Plasmodium species. The codon usage pattern is found to be less conserved in studied Plasmodium species, and changes species to species at the genus level. The codon usage pattern of P. knowlesi shows similarity to P. vivax as compared to P. falciparum. The ENC vs. GC3 study indicates that compositional constraints and translation selection is the decisive forces responsible for shaping their codon usage. The studies Plasmodium species shows a higher usage of A/T ending optimal codons. This favors the codon bias in P. knowlesi and P. vivax is due to high selection pressure and in P. falciparum, the compositional mutational pressure is a dominant force. In a nutshell, our finding suggests that the more or less similar codon usage pattern of P. knowlesi and P. vivax may suggest the similar host invasion and immune evasion strategies for disease establishment.


2011 ◽  
Vol 57 (12) ◽  
pp. 1016-1023 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xue Lian Luo ◽  
Jian Guo Xu ◽  
Chang Yun Ye

In this study, we analysed synonymous codon usage in Shigella flexneri 2a strain 301 (Sf301) and performed a comparative analysis of synonymous codon usage patterns in Sf301 and other strains of Shigella and Escherichia coli . Although there was a significant variety in codon usage bias among different Sf301 genes, there was a slight but observable codon usage bias that could primarily be attributable to mutational pressure and translational selection. In addition, the relative abundance of dinucleotides in Sf301 was observed to be independent of the overall base composition but was still caused by differential mutational pressure; this also shaped codon usage. By comparing the relative synonymous codon usage values across different Shigella and E. coli strains, we suggested that the synonymous codon usage pattern in the Shigella genomes was strain specific. This study represents a comprehensive analysis of Shigella codon usage patterns and provides a basic understanding of the mechanisms underlying codon usage bias.


2013 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 587-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Chen ◽  
D.Y. Yang ◽  
T.F. Liu ◽  
X. Nong ◽  
X. Huang ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 158 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhicheng Zhang ◽  
Wei Dai ◽  
Yang Wang ◽  
Chengping Lu ◽  
Hongjie Fan

Microbiology ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 149 (9) ◽  
pp. 2585-2596 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua T. Herbeck ◽  
Dennis P. Wall ◽  
Jennifer J. Wernegreen

Wigglesworthia glossinidia brevipalpis, the obligate bacterial endosymbiont of the tsetse fly Glossina brevipalpis, is characterized by extreme genome reduction and AT nucleotide composition bias. Here, multivariate statistical analyses are used to test the hypothesis that mutational bias and genetic drift shape synonymous codon usage and amino acid usage of Wigglesworthia. The results show that synonymous codon usage patterns vary little across the genome and do not distinguish genes of putative high and low expression levels, thus indicating a lack of translational selection. Extreme AT composition bias across the genome also drives relative amino acid usage, but predicted high-expression genes (ribosomal proteins and chaperonins) use GC-rich amino acids more frequently than do low-expression genes. The levels and configuration of amino acid differences between Wigglesworthia and Escherichia coli were compared to test the hypothesis that the relatively GC-rich amino acid profiles of high-expression genes reflect greater amino acid conservation at these loci. This hypothesis is supported by reduced levels of protein divergence at predicted high-expression Wigglesworthia genes and similar configurations of amino acid changes across expression categories. Combined, the results suggest that codon and amino acid usage in the Wigglesworthia genome reflect a strong AT mutational bias and elevated levels of genetic drift, consistent with expected effects of an endosymbiotic lifestyle and repeated population bottlenecks. However, these impacts of mutation and drift are apparently attenuated by selection on amino acid composition at high-expression genes.


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