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Gene expression level influences amino acid usage, but not codon usage, in the tsetse fly endosymbiont Wigglesworthia
Authors
Abbot
Akashi
+55 more
Akashi
Akashi
Akman
Aksoy
Andersson
Andersson
Baumann
Baumann
Bernardi
Birdsell
Blattner
Bulmer
Charles
Clark
Clark
Clark
D'Onofrio
de Miranda
Foster
Francino
Funk
Greenacre
Heddi
Kreitman
Lafay
Lai
Ma
Maddison
McInerney
McInerney
Mira
Moran
Moran
Nogge
Ochman
Ohama
Palacios
Powell
Rocha
Sandström
Sharp
Sharp
Shigenobu
Singer
Sokal
Srivastava
Sueoka
Swofford
van Ham
Wernegreen
Wernegreen
Wernegreen
Wernegreen
Wright
Yang
Publication date
1 January 2003
Publisher
'Microbiology Society'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © Society for General Mircobiology, 2003. This article is posted here by permission of Society for General Mircobiology for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Microbiology 149 (2003): 2585-2596, doi:10.1099/mic.0.26381-0.Wigglesworthia glossinidia brevipalpis, the obligate bacterial endosymbiont of the tsetse fly Glossina brevipalpis, is characterized by extreme genome reduction and AT nucleotide composition bias. Here, multivariate statistical analyses are used to test the hypothesis that mutational bias and genetic drift shape synonymous codon usage and amino acid usage of Wigglesworthia. The results show that synonymous codon usage patterns vary little across the genome and do not distinguish genes of putative high and low expression levels, thus indicating a lack of translational selection. Extreme AT composition bias across the genome also drives relative amino acid usage, but predicted high-expression genes (ribosomal proteins and chaperonins) use GC-rich amino acids more frequently than do low-expression genes. The levels and configuration of amino acid differences between Wigglesworthia and Escherichia coli were compared to test the hypothesis that the relatively GC-rich amino acid profiles of high-expression genes reflect greater amino acid conservation at these loci. This hypothesis is supported by reduced levels of protein divergence at predicted high-expression Wigglesworthia genes and similar configurations of amino acid changes across expression categories. Combined, the results suggest that codon and amino acid usage in the Wigglesworthia genome reflect a strong AT mutational bias and elevated levels of genetic drift, consistent with expected effects of an endosymbiotic lifestyle and repeated population bottlenecks. However, these impacts of mutation and drift are apparently attenuated by selection on amino acid composition at high-expression genes.This work was made possible by support to J. J. W. from the NIH (R01 GM62626-01) and NSF (DEB 0089455), and the Josephine Bay Paul and C. Michael Paul Foundation
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