Codon Pair Bias Is a Direct Consequence of Dinucleotide Bias

Codon pair bias is a remarkably stable characteristic of a species. Although functionally uncharacterized, robust virus attenuation was achieved by recoding of viral proteins using underrepresented codon pairs. Because viruses replicate exclusively inside living cells, we posited that their codon pa...

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Main Authors: Dusan Kunec, Nikolaus Osterrieder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-01-01
Series:Cell Reports
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211124715014242
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spelling doaj-ed9596b23a364c12a1b9b41be2708ab62020-11-24T21:54:59ZengElsevierCell Reports2211-12472016-01-01141556710.1016/j.celrep.2015.12.011Codon Pair Bias Is a Direct Consequence of Dinucleotide BiasDusan Kunec0Nikolaus Osterrieder1Institut für Virologie, Zentrum für Infektionsmedizin, Freie Universität Berlin, Robert-von-Ostertag-Straße 7–13, 14163 Berlin, GermanyInstitut für Virologie, Zentrum für Infektionsmedizin, Freie Universität Berlin, Robert-von-Ostertag-Straße 7–13, 14163 Berlin, GermanyCodon pair bias is a remarkably stable characteristic of a species. Although functionally uncharacterized, robust virus attenuation was achieved by recoding of viral proteins using underrepresented codon pairs. Because viruses replicate exclusively inside living cells, we posited that their codon pair preferences reflect those of their host(s). Analysis of many human viruses showed, however, that the encoding of viruses is influenced only marginally by host codon pair preferences. Furthermore, examination of codon pair preferences of vertebrate, insect, and arthropod-borne viruses revealed that the latter do not utilize codon pairs overrepresented in arthropods more frequently than other viruses. We found, however, that codon pair bias is a direct consequence of dinucleotide bias. We conclude that codon pair bias does not play a major role in the encoding of viral proteins and that virus attenuation by codon pair deoptimization has the same molecular underpinnings as attenuation based on an increase in CpG/TpA dinucleotides.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211124715014242
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dusan Kunec
Nikolaus Osterrieder
spellingShingle Dusan Kunec
Nikolaus Osterrieder
Codon Pair Bias Is a Direct Consequence of Dinucleotide Bias
Cell Reports
author_facet Dusan Kunec
Nikolaus Osterrieder
author_sort Dusan Kunec
title Codon Pair Bias Is a Direct Consequence of Dinucleotide Bias
title_short Codon Pair Bias Is a Direct Consequence of Dinucleotide Bias
title_full Codon Pair Bias Is a Direct Consequence of Dinucleotide Bias
title_fullStr Codon Pair Bias Is a Direct Consequence of Dinucleotide Bias
title_full_unstemmed Codon Pair Bias Is a Direct Consequence of Dinucleotide Bias
title_sort codon pair bias is a direct consequence of dinucleotide bias
publisher Elsevier
series Cell Reports
issn 2211-1247
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Codon pair bias is a remarkably stable characteristic of a species. Although functionally uncharacterized, robust virus attenuation was achieved by recoding of viral proteins using underrepresented codon pairs. Because viruses replicate exclusively inside living cells, we posited that their codon pair preferences reflect those of their host(s). Analysis of many human viruses showed, however, that the encoding of viruses is influenced only marginally by host codon pair preferences. Furthermore, examination of codon pair preferences of vertebrate, insect, and arthropod-borne viruses revealed that the latter do not utilize codon pairs overrepresented in arthropods more frequently than other viruses. We found, however, that codon pair bias is a direct consequence of dinucleotide bias. We conclude that codon pair bias does not play a major role in the encoding of viral proteins and that virus attenuation by codon pair deoptimization has the same molecular underpinnings as attenuation based on an increase in CpG/TpA dinucleotides.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211124715014242
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AT nikolausosterrieder codonpairbiasisadirectconsequenceofdinucleotidebias
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