Replicational and transcriptional selection on codon usage in Borrelia burgdorferi

  1. James O. McInerney
  1. Department of Zoology, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, United Kingdom
  1. Edited by M. T. Clegg, University of California, Riverside, CA, and approved June 4, 1998 (received for review March 12, 1998)

Abstract

With more than 10 fully sequenced, publicly available prokaryotic genomes, it is now becoming possible to gain useful insights into genome evolution. Before the genome era, many evolutionary processes were evaluated from limited data sets and evolutionary models were constructed on the basis of small amounts of evidence. In this paper, I show that genes on the Borrelia burgdorferi genome have two separate, distinct, and significantly different codon usages, depending on whether the gene is transcribed on the leading or lagging strand of replication. Asymmetrical replication is the major source of codon usage variation. Replicational selection is responsible for the higher number of genes on the leading strands, and transcriptional selection appears to be responsible for the enrichment of highly expressed genes on these strands. Replicational–transcriptional selection, therefore, has an influence on the codon usage of a gene. This is a new paradigm of codon selection in prokaryotes.

Footnotes

  • This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the Proceedings Office.

  • * To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: j.mcinerney{at}nhm.ac.uk.

  • ABBREVIATIONS:
    RSCU,
    relative synonymous codon usage;
    CA,
    correspondence analysis;
    Nc,
    effective number of codons;
    GC3s,
    G+C base composition at the third position of synonymously degenerate third positions
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