Plants experience different stresses, i.e., abiotic, or biotic, and to combat them, plants re-program the expression of growth-, metabolism-, and resistance-related genes. These genes differ in their synonymous codon usage frequency and show codon usage bias. Here, we investigated the correlation among codon usage bias, gene expression, and underlying mechanisms in rice under abiotic and biotic stress conditions. The results indicated that genes with higher expression (up- or downregulated) levels had high GC content (≥60%), a low effective number of codon usage (≤40), and exhibited strong biases towards the codons with C/G at the third nucleotide position, irrespective of stress received. TTC, ATC, and CTC were the most preferred codons, w...
Abiotic and biotic stress responses are traditionally thought to be regulated by discrete signaling ...
<div><p>Rice is sensitive to chilling stress, especially at the seedling stage. To elucidate the mol...
The International Rice Functional Genomics Consortium (IRFGC), has been working together to collabor...
Abstract Background Synonymous codon usage varies widely between genomes, and also between genes wit...
Intra-genomic variation between housekeeping and tissue-specific genes has always been a study of in...
The regulatory mechanisms of determining which genes specifically expressed in which tissues are sti...
<div><p>The regulatory mechanisms of determining which genes specifically expressed in which tissues...
AbstractTwo gene classes characterized by high and low GC content have been found in rice and other ...
Background: Synonymous codon usage bias has typically been correlated with, and attributed to transl...
The codon composition of coding sequences plays an important role in the regulation of gene expressi...
The domestication of wild rice occurred together with genomic variation, including the synonymous nu...
Understanding the molecular basis of plant performance under water-limiting conditions will help to ...
Cereal genes are classified into two distinct classes according to the guanine-cytosine (GC) content...
Rice is sensitive to chilling stress, especially at the seedling stage. To elucidate the molecular g...
The synonymous codons usage shows a characteristic pattern of preference in each organism. This codo...
Abiotic and biotic stress responses are traditionally thought to be regulated by discrete signaling ...
<div><p>Rice is sensitive to chilling stress, especially at the seedling stage. To elucidate the mol...
The International Rice Functional Genomics Consortium (IRFGC), has been working together to collabor...
Abstract Background Synonymous codon usage varies widely between genomes, and also between genes wit...
Intra-genomic variation between housekeeping and tissue-specific genes has always been a study of in...
The regulatory mechanisms of determining which genes specifically expressed in which tissues are sti...
<div><p>The regulatory mechanisms of determining which genes specifically expressed in which tissues...
AbstractTwo gene classes characterized by high and low GC content have been found in rice and other ...
Background: Synonymous codon usage bias has typically been correlated with, and attributed to transl...
The codon composition of coding sequences plays an important role in the regulation of gene expressi...
The domestication of wild rice occurred together with genomic variation, including the synonymous nu...
Understanding the molecular basis of plant performance under water-limiting conditions will help to ...
Cereal genes are classified into two distinct classes according to the guanine-cytosine (GC) content...
Rice is sensitive to chilling stress, especially at the seedling stage. To elucidate the molecular g...
The synonymous codons usage shows a characteristic pattern of preference in each organism. This codo...
Abiotic and biotic stress responses are traditionally thought to be regulated by discrete signaling ...
<div><p>Rice is sensitive to chilling stress, especially at the seedling stage. To elucidate the mol...
The International Rice Functional Genomics Consortium (IRFGC), has been working together to collabor...