Selection On synonymous Mutations Revealed by 1135 Genomes of

Synonymous mutations do not change the amino acid but do change the synonymous codon usage. In genomes of different organisms, the gene conversion process is biased toward GC, which is irrespective of mutation bias. In the coding region, this trend is especially obvious and it is possibly caused by...

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Main Author: Lai Wei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-04-01
Series:Evolutionary Bioinformatics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1176934320916794
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spelling doaj-8f8d452a6dc3418a86a0bb978e6eecfa2020-11-25T03:40:03ZengSAGE PublishingEvolutionary Bioinformatics1176-93432020-04-011610.1177/1176934320916794Selection On synonymous Mutations Revealed by 1135 Genomes of Lai WeiSynonymous mutations do not change the amino acid but do change the synonymous codon usage. In genomes of different organisms, the gene conversion process is biased toward GC, which is irrespective of mutation bias. In the coding region, this trend is especially obvious and it is possibly caused by the preference on G/C-ending codons over the A/T-ending ones. If the G/C-ending codons are advantageous, then the synonymous mutations that change A/T to G/C would be “optimal” compared to the opposite ones. In theory, one should observe signals of positive selection on these optimal synonymous mutations. The recently released single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data from the 1001 genome project of Arabidopsis thaliana provided researchers with an unprecedented opportunity to verify this assumption. I fully take advantage of the SNP data from 1,135 A thaliana lines and came to the conclusion that synonymous mutations in natural populations are not strictly neutral: the synonymous mutations that increase GC content (from A/T to G/C) tend to have higher derived allele frequencies (DAFs) and, therefore, are likely to be positively selected. My current study broadens our knowledge of the selection patterns of synonymous mutations and should be appealing to evolutionary biologists. One sentence summary: In 1135 genomes of Arabidopsis thaliana , the synonymous mutations that increase the GC content tend to have higher derived allele frequencies (DAFs) and are likely to be positively selected.https://doi.org/10.1177/1176934320916794
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lai Wei
spellingShingle Lai Wei
Selection On synonymous Mutations Revealed by 1135 Genomes of
Evolutionary Bioinformatics
author_facet Lai Wei
author_sort Lai Wei
title Selection On synonymous Mutations Revealed by 1135 Genomes of
title_short Selection On synonymous Mutations Revealed by 1135 Genomes of
title_full Selection On synonymous Mutations Revealed by 1135 Genomes of
title_fullStr Selection On synonymous Mutations Revealed by 1135 Genomes of
title_full_unstemmed Selection On synonymous Mutations Revealed by 1135 Genomes of
title_sort selection on synonymous mutations revealed by 1135 genomes of
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Evolutionary Bioinformatics
issn 1176-9343
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Synonymous mutations do not change the amino acid but do change the synonymous codon usage. In genomes of different organisms, the gene conversion process is biased toward GC, which is irrespective of mutation bias. In the coding region, this trend is especially obvious and it is possibly caused by the preference on G/C-ending codons over the A/T-ending ones. If the G/C-ending codons are advantageous, then the synonymous mutations that change A/T to G/C would be “optimal” compared to the opposite ones. In theory, one should observe signals of positive selection on these optimal synonymous mutations. The recently released single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data from the 1001 genome project of Arabidopsis thaliana provided researchers with an unprecedented opportunity to verify this assumption. I fully take advantage of the SNP data from 1,135 A thaliana lines and came to the conclusion that synonymous mutations in natural populations are not strictly neutral: the synonymous mutations that increase GC content (from A/T to G/C) tend to have higher derived allele frequencies (DAFs) and, therefore, are likely to be positively selected. My current study broadens our knowledge of the selection patterns of synonymous mutations and should be appealing to evolutionary biologists. One sentence summary: In 1135 genomes of Arabidopsis thaliana , the synonymous mutations that increase the GC content tend to have higher derived allele frequencies (DAFs) and are likely to be positively selected.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1176934320916794
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