Affiliation:
1. College of Life Sciences, Hainan Normal University, Haikou 571199, China
2. Harbin Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin 150029, China
3. Sanya Research Institute, Nanjing Agricultural University, Sanya 572025, China
Abstract
This study investigates codon usage bias within the chloroplast genomes of 18 Taraxacum species, focusing on the base composition and various metrics including GC content, Relative Synonymous Codon Usage (RSCU), Effective Number of Codons (ENc), and GC3s. Our analysis revealed a pronounced preference for A/T-ending codons across Taraxacum species, with GC content across the first, second, and third positions of the codons (GC1, GC2, GC3) and the average GC content consistently below 50%. A detailed examination using the RSCU metric identified 29 commonly preferred A/T-ending codons, indicating a strong codon usage bias towards these endings. Specifically, the codon for leucine (UUA) emerged as highly preferred, while the codon for serine (AGC) was least favored. Through the ENc–GC3s plot analysis, we explored the forces shaping this bias, finding evidence that both mutation pressure and natural selection significantly influence codon preference, with most coding sequences showing weak bias. The PR2 plot analysis further confirmed the role of these factors by demonstrating a higher frequency of T over A and C over G at the third codon position, pointing towards a mutation bias complemented by natural selection. Collectively, our findings highlight a consistent pattern of codon usage bias in the chloroplast genomes of Taraxacum species, influenced by a combination of mutation pressure, natural selection, and possibly other unidentified factors.
Funder
The special research fund for doctoral students of Sanya YazhouBay Science and Technology City
Reference43 articles.
1. Manyanga, F., and Sithole, A. (2014). Nucleic Acids, Structure and Function for General Biochemistry, Biology and Biotechnology, Lulu.com.
2. Zolyan, S. (2023). On the minimal elements of the genetic code and their semiotic functions (degeneracy, complementarity, wobbling). Biosystems, 231.
3. Codon usage bias;Parvathy;Mol. Biol. Rep.,2022
4. Mutational bias and natural selection driving the synonymous codon usage of single-exon genes in rice (Oryza sativa L.);Hu;Rice,2023
5. Flora of China;Lin;Harv. Pap. Bot.,2013