3.9 Article

Codon Usage Bias and Determining Forces in Taenia solium Genome

Journal

KOREAN JOURNAL OF PARASITOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 6, Pages 689-697

Publisher

KOREAN SOC PARASITOLOGY, SEOUL NATL UNIV COLL MEDI
DOI: 10.3347/kjp.2015.53.6.689

Keywords

Taenia solium; codon usage bias; translation selection; mutation bias; intron number

Categories

Funding

  1. 863 program [2006AA 10A207]
  2. Gansu Natural Science Foundation [1010RJZ A002]
  3. National Key Project of Scientific and Technical Supporting program, China [2007BAD40B03]

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The tapeworm Taenia solium is an important human zoonotic parasite that causes great economic loss and also endangers public health. At present, an effective vaccine that will prevent infection and chemotherapy without any side effect remains to be developed. In this study, codon usage patterns in the T. solium genome were examined through 8,484 protein-coding genes. Neutrality analysis showed that T. solium had a narrow GC distribution, and a significant correlation was observed between GC12 and GC3. Examination of an NC (ENC vs GC3s)-plot showed a few genes on or close to the expected curve, but the majority of points with low-ENC (the effective number of codons) values were detected below the expected curve, suggesting that mutational bias plays a major role in shaping codon usage. The Parity Rule 2 plot (PR2) analysis showed that GC and AT were not used proportionally. We also identified 26 optimal codons in the T. solium genome, all of which ended with either a G or C residue. These optimal codons in the T. solium genome are likely consistent with tRNAs that are highly expressed in the cell, suggesting that mutational and translational selection forces are probably driving factors of codon usage bias in the T. solium genome.

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