Different codons encoding the same amino acid are not used equally in protein-coding sequences. In bacteria, there is a bias towards codons with high translation rates. This bias is most pronounced in highly expressed proteins, but a recent study of synthetic GFP-coding sequences did not find a correlation between codon usage and GFP expression, suggesting that such correlation in natural sequences is not a simple property of translational mechanisms. Here, we investigate the effect of evolutionary forces on codon usage. The relation between codon bias and protein abundance is quantitatively analyzed based on the hypothesis that codon bias evolved to ensure the efficient usage of ribosomes, a precious commodity for fast growing cells. An ex...
Organisms construct proteins out of individual amino acids using instructions encoded in the nucleot...
We develop an evolutionary model, inspired from Yang and Nielsen [1], that takes into account evo-lu...
Synonymous codons, i.e., DNA nucleotide triplets coding for the same amino acid, are used differentl...
Different codons encoding the same amino acid are not used equally in protein-coding sequences. In b...
Different codons encoding the same amino acid are not used equally in protein-coding sequences. In b...
<div><p>Different codons encoding the same amino acid are not used equally in protein-coding sequenc...
Although the mapping of codon to amino acid is conserved across nearly all species, the frequency at...
Frequencies of synonymous codons are typically non-uniform, despite the fact that such codons corres...
Frequencies of synonymous codons are typically non-uniform, despite the fact that such codons corres...
BackgroundCorrelations between genome composition (in terms of GC content) and usage of particular c...
BackgroundCorrelations between genome composition (in terms of GC content) and usage of particular c...
Organisms construct proteins out of individual amino acids using instructions encoded in the nucleot...
Organisms construct proteins out of individual amino acids using instructions encoded in the nucleot...
In this study we have focused on the codon usage bias in E. coli, at two different levels, the codon...
The genetic code is redundant, with most amino acids coded by multiple codons. In many organisms, co...
Organisms construct proteins out of individual amino acids using instructions encoded in the nucleot...
We develop an evolutionary model, inspired from Yang and Nielsen [1], that takes into account evo-lu...
Synonymous codons, i.e., DNA nucleotide triplets coding for the same amino acid, are used differentl...
Different codons encoding the same amino acid are not used equally in protein-coding sequences. In b...
Different codons encoding the same amino acid are not used equally in protein-coding sequences. In b...
<div><p>Different codons encoding the same amino acid are not used equally in protein-coding sequenc...
Although the mapping of codon to amino acid is conserved across nearly all species, the frequency at...
Frequencies of synonymous codons are typically non-uniform, despite the fact that such codons corres...
Frequencies of synonymous codons are typically non-uniform, despite the fact that such codons corres...
BackgroundCorrelations between genome composition (in terms of GC content) and usage of particular c...
BackgroundCorrelations between genome composition (in terms of GC content) and usage of particular c...
Organisms construct proteins out of individual amino acids using instructions encoded in the nucleot...
Organisms construct proteins out of individual amino acids using instructions encoded in the nucleot...
In this study we have focused on the codon usage bias in E. coli, at two different levels, the codon...
The genetic code is redundant, with most amino acids coded by multiple codons. In many organisms, co...
Organisms construct proteins out of individual amino acids using instructions encoded in the nucleot...
We develop an evolutionary model, inspired from Yang and Nielsen [1], that takes into account evo-lu...
Synonymous codons, i.e., DNA nucleotide triplets coding for the same amino acid, are used differentl...