• Request Info
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give
  • Request Info
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give

Search

  • A-Z Index
  • Map

Ecology & Evolutionary Biology

  • About
    • Give to EEB
    • Alumni
  • People
    • Faculty
    • Emeritus
    • Graduate Students
    • Adjunct
    • Postdocs
    • Research Staff
    • Administrative Staff
  • Undergraduate Students
    • EEB Concentration in Biology
    • EEB Minor
    • Honors
    • Course Descriptions
    • Naturalists Club
    • Fellowships
    • Be successful in EEB
  • Graduate Students
    • Graduate Student Handbook
    • FAQs
    • Applying to Grad School
    • GREBE
    • Funding
  • Research and Outreach
    • Research Highlights
    • Undergraduate Research Opportunities
    • Outreach Events
  • Collections and Facilities
    • UT Herbarium
    • UT Etnier Ichthyology Collection
    • Hesler Biology Greenhouses
    • Natural History Collections Course
    • Fellowships and Awards
    • Biology Field Station
  • News & Seminars
    • Current Seminars
    • News
    • Newsletter
Home » PNAS paper on complex codon usage patterns

PNAS paper on complex codon usage patterns

August 19, 2011 by wpeeb

EEB grad student Premal Shah (now a postdoc in the Plotkin lab at the U. of Pennsylvania) and his adviser, Associate Prof. Mike Gilchrist, recently published a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on “Explaining complex codon usage patterns with selection for translational efficiency, mutation bias, and genetic drift.”

Abstract: The genetic code is redundant with most amino acids using multiple codons. In many organisms, codon usage is biased toward particular codons. Understanding the adaptive and nonadaptive forces driving the evolution of codon usage bias (CUB) has been an area of intense focus and debate in the fields of molecular and evolutionary biology. However, their relative importance in shaping genomic patterns of CUB remains unsolved. Using a nested model of protein translation and population genetics, we show that observed gene level variation of CUB in Saccharomyces cerevisiae can be explained almost entirely by selection for efficient ribosomal usage, genetic drift, and biased mutation. The correlation between observed codon counts within individual genes and our model predictions is 0.96. Although a variety of factors shape patterns of CUB at the level of individual sites within genes, our results suggest that selection for efficient ribosome usage is a central force in shaping codon usage at the genomic scale. In addition, our model allows direct estimation of codon-specific mutation rates and elongation times and can be readily applied to any organism with high-throughput expression datasets. More generally, we have developed a natural framework for integrating models of molecular processes to population genetics models to quantitatively estimate parameters underlying fundamental biological processes, such a protein translation.

Filed Under: Gilchrist, graduate, MAIN, PNAS

Ecology & Evolutionary Biology

College of Arts and Sciences

569 Dabney Hall
Knoxville TN 37996-1610

Email: eeb@utk.edu

Phone: 865-974-3065

The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996
865-974-1000

The flagship campus of the University of Tennessee System and partner in the Tennessee Transfer Pathway.

ADA Privacy Safety Title IX