43 research outputs found

    THE GENETIC CODE AND ERROR TRANSMISSION

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    Was Wright Right? The Canonical Genetic Code is an Empirical Example of an Adaptive Peak in Nature; Deviant Genetic Codes Evolved Using Adaptive Bridges

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    The canonical genetic code is on a sub-optimal adaptive peak with respect to its ability to minimize errors, and is close to, but not quite, optimal. This is demonstrated by the near-total adjacency of synonymous codons, the similarity of adjacent codons, and comparisons of frequency of amino acid usage with number of codons in the code for each amino acid. As a rare empirical example of an adaptive peak in nature, it shows adaptive peaks are real, not merely theoretical. The evolution of deviant genetic codes illustrates how populations move from a lower to a higher adaptive peak. This is done by the use of “adaptive bridges,” neutral pathways that cross over maladaptive valleys by virtue of masking of the phenotypic expression of some maladaptive aspects in the genotype. This appears to be the general mechanism by which populations travel from one adaptive peak to another. There are multiple routes a population can follow to cross from one adaptive peak to another. These routes vary in the probability that they will be used, and this probability is determined by the number and nature of the mutations that happen along each of the routes. A modification of the depiction of adaptive landscapes showing genetic distances and probabilities of travel along their multiple possible routes would throw light on this important concept

    Evidence for a coding pattern on the non-coding strand of the E. coli genome.

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    Analysis of codon usage frequency for the combined coding sequences of 52 E. coli genes, taken from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory Nucleotide Sequence Data Library, Release 2, shows that there is a significant positive correlation between the frequency with which a given codon appears on the coding strand and the frequency with which it appears, in phase, on the non-coding strand

    Evidence for a coding pattern on the non-coding strand of the E. coli

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    Phase of the amplitude ratio (K L →π+π−)/(K s →π+π−)

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