Background In many genomes, a clear preference in the usage of particular codons exists. The mechanisms that induce codon biases remain an open question; studies have attributed codon usage to translational selection, mutational bias and drift. Furthermore, correlations between codon usage within host genomes and their viral pathogens have been observed for a myriad of host-virus systems. As such, numerous studies have investigated codon usage and codon bias in an effort to better understand how species evolve. Numerous metrics have been developed to identify biases in codon usage. In addition, a few data repositories of codon bias data are available, differing in the metrics reported as well as the number and taxonomy of strains examined. ...
Frequencies of synonymous codons are typically non-uniform, despite the fact that such codons corres...
Synonymous codons are randomly distributed among genes, a phenomenon termed as codon usage bias. Und...
Codon bias, the usage patterns of synonymous codons for encoding a protein sequence as nucleotides, ...
Bacterial genomes often reflect a bias in the usage of codons. These biases are often most notable w...
Background: Statistics measuring codon selection seek to compare genes by their sensitivity to selec...
Initially, this thesis investigates patterns of intragenomic codon usage within the genome of the De...
Across all kingdoms of biological life, protein-coding genes exhibit unequal usage of synonymous cod...
The genetic codes have degeneracy; that is, most amino acids (18 out of 20 in the universal genetic ...
The genetic code encodes 20 amino acids using 64 nucleotide triplets or codons. 18 of the 20 amino a...
Synonymous codons, i.e., DNA nucleotide triplets coding for the same amino acid, are used differentl...
<p><em>Second term paper for my Biol L533 class (evolution of genes and genomes) with Mike Lynch, Wi...
AbstractCodon bias is the phenomenon in which distinct synonymous codons are used with different fre...
Not AvailableCodon is the basic unit for biological message transmission during synthesis of protein...
Synonymous codons, i.e., DNA nucleotide triplets coding for the same amino acid, are used differentl...
The genetic code encodes the same amino acid with multiple codon choices, but in a biased fashion. T...
Frequencies of synonymous codons are typically non-uniform, despite the fact that such codons corres...
Synonymous codons are randomly distributed among genes, a phenomenon termed as codon usage bias. Und...
Codon bias, the usage patterns of synonymous codons for encoding a protein sequence as nucleotides, ...
Bacterial genomes often reflect a bias in the usage of codons. These biases are often most notable w...
Background: Statistics measuring codon selection seek to compare genes by their sensitivity to selec...
Initially, this thesis investigates patterns of intragenomic codon usage within the genome of the De...
Across all kingdoms of biological life, protein-coding genes exhibit unequal usage of synonymous cod...
The genetic codes have degeneracy; that is, most amino acids (18 out of 20 in the universal genetic ...
The genetic code encodes 20 amino acids using 64 nucleotide triplets or codons. 18 of the 20 amino a...
Synonymous codons, i.e., DNA nucleotide triplets coding for the same amino acid, are used differentl...
<p><em>Second term paper for my Biol L533 class (evolution of genes and genomes) with Mike Lynch, Wi...
AbstractCodon bias is the phenomenon in which distinct synonymous codons are used with different fre...
Not AvailableCodon is the basic unit for biological message transmission during synthesis of protein...
Synonymous codons, i.e., DNA nucleotide triplets coding for the same amino acid, are used differentl...
The genetic code encodes the same amino acid with multiple codon choices, but in a biased fashion. T...
Frequencies of synonymous codons are typically non-uniform, despite the fact that such codons corres...
Synonymous codons are randomly distributed among genes, a phenomenon termed as codon usage bias. Und...
Codon bias, the usage patterns of synonymous codons for encoding a protein sequence as nucleotides, ...