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Codon usage patterns in Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, Drosophila melanogaster and Homo sapiens; a review of the considerable within-species diversity

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TLDR
These trends for codon usage are illustrated for six species whereCodon usage has been examined in detail, by presenting the pooled codon used for the 10% of genes at either end of the major trend.
Abstract
The genetic code is degenerate, but alternative synonymous codons are generally not used with equal frequency. Since the pioneering work of Grantham's group it has been apparent that genes from one species often share similarities in codon frequency; under the "genome hypothesis" there is a species-specific pattern to codon usage. However, it has become clear that in most species there are also considerable differences among genes. Multivariate analyses have revealed that in each species so far examined there is a single major trend in codon usage among genes, usually from highly biased to more nearly even usage of synonymous codons. Thus, to represent the codon usage pattern of an organism it is not sufficient to sum over all genes as this conceals the underlying heterogeneity. Rather, it is necessary to describe the trend among genes seen in that species. We illustrate these trends for six species where codon usage has been examined in detail, by presenting the pooled codon usage for the 10% of genes at either end of the major trend. Closely-related organisms have similar patterns of codon usage, and so the six species in Table 1 are representative of wider groups. For example, with respect to codon usage, Salmonella typhimurium closely resembles E. coli, while all mammalian species so far examined (principally mouse, rat and cow) largely resemble humans.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Codon usage in Kluyveromyces lactis and in yeast cytochrome c-encoding genes

TL;DR: A new index, the intrinsic codon deviation index (ICDI), is proposed to estimate codon bias of genes from species in which optimal codons are not known; its correlation with other index values, like CBI or effective number of codons (Nc), is high.
Journal ArticleDOI

Codon usage in Aspergillus nidulans

TL;DR: The G+C content of the A. nidulans genome is close to 50%, indicating little overall mutational bias, and so the codon usage of lowly expressed genes is as expected in the absence of selection pressure at silent sites.
Journal ArticleDOI

Directional mutation pressure, mutator mutations, and dynamics of molecular evolution

TL;DR: The present analyses lead to several predictions that are not consistent with a number of the frequently held assumptions in the field of molecular evolution, including belief in a constant rate of evolution, symmetric branching of phylogenetic trees, the generality of higher mutation frequency for neutral sets of nucleotides, and teleological explanations of DNA base composition.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Phytochrome Sensory Domain Permits Receptor Activation by Red Light

TL;DR: A red-light-induced homodimerization domain is developed that shows that an optimized sensory domain of the cyanobacterial phytochrome 1 can be expressed robustly and without cytotoxicity in human cells and will prove useful to regulate a variety of cellular processes with light.
Patent

Heterodimeric fusion proteins useful for targeted immune therapy and general immune stimulation

TL;DR: In this article, methods for producing fusion proteins with the heterodimeric cytokine, interleukin-12, have been described, in order to insure that the proper ratio of fused and non-fused subunits are obtained in the fusion protein.
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