Author:
Marais Gabriel,Mouchiroud Dominique,Duret Laurent
Abstract
Understanding the factors responsible for variations in mutation
patterns and selection efficacy along chromosomes is a prerequisite for
deciphering genome sequences. Population genetics models predict a
positive correlation between the efficacy of selection at a given locus
and the local rate of recombination because of Hill–Robertson effects.
Codon usage is considered one of the most striking examples that
support this prediction at the molecular level. In a wide range of
species including Caenorhabditis elegans
and Drosophila melanogaster, codon usage is essentially
shaped by selection acting for translational efficiency. Codon usage
bias correlates positively with recombination rate in
Drosophila, apparently supporting the hypothesis that
selection on codon usage is improved by recombination. Here we present
an exhaustive analysis of codon usage in C. elegans and
D. melanogaster complete genomes. We show that in both
genomes there is a positive correlation between recombination rate and
the frequency of optimal codons. However, we demonstrate that in both
species, this effect is due to a mutational bias toward G and C bases
in regions of high recombination rate, possibly as a direct consequence
of the recombination process. The correlation between codon usage bias
and recombination rate in these species appears to be essentially
determined by recombination-dependent mutational patterns, rather than
selective effects. This result highlights that it is necessary to take
into account the mutagenic effect of recombination to understand the
evolutionary role and impact of recombination.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
208 articles.
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