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Insight into Codon Utilization Pattern of Tumor Suppressor Gene EPB41L3 from Different Mammalian Species Indicates Dominant Role of Selection Force

SIMPLE SUMMARY: The present study envisaged the codon usage pattern analysis of tumor suppressor gene EPB41L3 for the human, brown rat, domesticated cattle, and Sumatran orangutan. Most amino acids are coded by more than one synonymous codon, but they are used in a biased manner. The codon usage bia...

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Autores principales: Kumar, Utsang, Khandia, Rekha, Singhal, Shailja, Puranik, Nidhi, Tripathi, Meghna, Pateriya, Atul Kumar, Khan, Raju, Emran, Talha Bin, Dhama, Kuldeep, Munjal, Ashok, Alqahtani, Taha, Alqahtani, Ali M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8198080/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34205890
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13112739
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author Kumar, Utsang
Khandia, Rekha
Singhal, Shailja
Puranik, Nidhi
Tripathi, Meghna
Pateriya, Atul Kumar
Khan, Raju
Emran, Talha Bin
Dhama, Kuldeep
Munjal, Ashok
Alqahtani, Taha
Alqahtani, Ali M.
author_facet Kumar, Utsang
Khandia, Rekha
Singhal, Shailja
Puranik, Nidhi
Tripathi, Meghna
Pateriya, Atul Kumar
Khan, Raju
Emran, Talha Bin
Dhama, Kuldeep
Munjal, Ashok
Alqahtani, Taha
Alqahtani, Ali M.
author_sort Kumar, Utsang
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: The present study envisaged the codon usage pattern analysis of tumor suppressor gene EPB41L3 for the human, brown rat, domesticated cattle, and Sumatran orangutan. Most amino acids are coded by more than one synonymous codon, but they are used in a biased manner. The codon usage bias results from multiple factors like compositional properties, dinucleotide abundance, neutrality, parity, tRNA pool, etc. Understanding codon bias is central to fields as diverse as molecular evolution, gene expressivity, protein translation, and protein folding. This kind of studies is important to see the effects of various evolutionary forces on codon usage. The present study indicated that the selection force is dominant over other forces shaping codon usage in the envisaged organisms. ABSTRACT: Uneven codon usage within genes as well as among genomes is a usual phenomenon across organisms. It plays a significant role in the translational efficiency and evolution of a particular gene. EPB41L3 is a tumor suppressor protein-coding gene, and in the present study, the pattern of codon usage was envisaged. The full-length sequences of the EPB41L3 gene for the human, brown rat, domesticated cattle, and Sumatran orangutan available at the NCBI were retrieved and utilized to analyze CUB patterns across the selected mammalian species. Compositional properties, dinucleotide abundance, and parity analysis showed the dominance of A and G whilst RSCU analysis indicated the dominance of G/C-ending codons. The neutrality plot plotted between GC12 and GC3 to determine the variation between the mutation pressure and natural selection indicated the dominance of selection pressure (R = 0.926; p < 0.00001) over the three codon positions across the gene. The result is in concordance with the codon adaptation index analysis and the ENc-GC3 plot analysis, as well as the translational selection index (P2). Overall selection pressure is the dominant pressure acting during the evolution of the EPB41L3 gene.
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spelling pubmed-81980802021-06-14 Insight into Codon Utilization Pattern of Tumor Suppressor Gene EPB41L3 from Different Mammalian Species Indicates Dominant Role of Selection Force Kumar, Utsang Khandia, Rekha Singhal, Shailja Puranik, Nidhi Tripathi, Meghna Pateriya, Atul Kumar Khan, Raju Emran, Talha Bin Dhama, Kuldeep Munjal, Ashok Alqahtani, Taha Alqahtani, Ali M. Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: The present study envisaged the codon usage pattern analysis of tumor suppressor gene EPB41L3 for the human, brown rat, domesticated cattle, and Sumatran orangutan. Most amino acids are coded by more than one synonymous codon, but they are used in a biased manner. The codon usage bias results from multiple factors like compositional properties, dinucleotide abundance, neutrality, parity, tRNA pool, etc. Understanding codon bias is central to fields as diverse as molecular evolution, gene expressivity, protein translation, and protein folding. This kind of studies is important to see the effects of various evolutionary forces on codon usage. The present study indicated that the selection force is dominant over other forces shaping codon usage in the envisaged organisms. ABSTRACT: Uneven codon usage within genes as well as among genomes is a usual phenomenon across organisms. It plays a significant role in the translational efficiency and evolution of a particular gene. EPB41L3 is a tumor suppressor protein-coding gene, and in the present study, the pattern of codon usage was envisaged. The full-length sequences of the EPB41L3 gene for the human, brown rat, domesticated cattle, and Sumatran orangutan available at the NCBI were retrieved and utilized to analyze CUB patterns across the selected mammalian species. Compositional properties, dinucleotide abundance, and parity analysis showed the dominance of A and G whilst RSCU analysis indicated the dominance of G/C-ending codons. The neutrality plot plotted between GC12 and GC3 to determine the variation between the mutation pressure and natural selection indicated the dominance of selection pressure (R = 0.926; p < 0.00001) over the three codon positions across the gene. The result is in concordance with the codon adaptation index analysis and the ENc-GC3 plot analysis, as well as the translational selection index (P2). Overall selection pressure is the dominant pressure acting during the evolution of the EPB41L3 gene. MDPI 2021-06-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8198080/ /pubmed/34205890 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13112739 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kumar, Utsang
Khandia, Rekha
Singhal, Shailja
Puranik, Nidhi
Tripathi, Meghna
Pateriya, Atul Kumar
Khan, Raju
Emran, Talha Bin
Dhama, Kuldeep
Munjal, Ashok
Alqahtani, Taha
Alqahtani, Ali M.
Insight into Codon Utilization Pattern of Tumor Suppressor Gene EPB41L3 from Different Mammalian Species Indicates Dominant Role of Selection Force
title Insight into Codon Utilization Pattern of Tumor Suppressor Gene EPB41L3 from Different Mammalian Species Indicates Dominant Role of Selection Force
title_full Insight into Codon Utilization Pattern of Tumor Suppressor Gene EPB41L3 from Different Mammalian Species Indicates Dominant Role of Selection Force
title_fullStr Insight into Codon Utilization Pattern of Tumor Suppressor Gene EPB41L3 from Different Mammalian Species Indicates Dominant Role of Selection Force
title_full_unstemmed Insight into Codon Utilization Pattern of Tumor Suppressor Gene EPB41L3 from Different Mammalian Species Indicates Dominant Role of Selection Force
title_short Insight into Codon Utilization Pattern of Tumor Suppressor Gene EPB41L3 from Different Mammalian Species Indicates Dominant Role of Selection Force
title_sort insight into codon utilization pattern of tumor suppressor gene epb41l3 from different mammalian species indicates dominant role of selection force
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8198080/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34205890
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13112739
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