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selective force favoring increased G+C content in bacterial genes
by
Raghavan, Rahul
, Ochman, Howard
, Kelkar, Yogeshwar D
in
Adaptation, Biological - genetics
/ Bacteria
/ Bacterial genomes
/ Base composition
/ Base Composition - genetics
/ Biological Sciences
/ Codons
/ DNA
/ E coli
/ Escherichia coli
/ Escherichia coli - genetics
/ Evolution
/ Evolution, Molecular
/ Genes
/ Genetic Variation
/ Genomes
/ Genomics
/ Intergenic DNA
/ Messenger RNA
/ Mutation
/ Mutation - genetics
/ natural selection
/ Regression Analysis
/ Selection, Genetic
/ sequence analysis
2012
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selective force favoring increased G+C content in bacterial genes
by
Raghavan, Rahul
, Ochman, Howard
, Kelkar, Yogeshwar D
in
Adaptation, Biological - genetics
/ Bacteria
/ Bacterial genomes
/ Base composition
/ Base Composition - genetics
/ Biological Sciences
/ Codons
/ DNA
/ E coli
/ Escherichia coli
/ Escherichia coli - genetics
/ Evolution
/ Evolution, Molecular
/ Genes
/ Genetic Variation
/ Genomes
/ Genomics
/ Intergenic DNA
/ Messenger RNA
/ Mutation
/ Mutation - genetics
/ natural selection
/ Regression Analysis
/ Selection, Genetic
/ sequence analysis
2012
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selective force favoring increased G+C content in bacterial genes
by
Raghavan, Rahul
, Ochman, Howard
, Kelkar, Yogeshwar D
in
Adaptation, Biological - genetics
/ Bacteria
/ Bacterial genomes
/ Base composition
/ Base Composition - genetics
/ Biological Sciences
/ Codons
/ DNA
/ E coli
/ Escherichia coli
/ Escherichia coli - genetics
/ Evolution
/ Evolution, Molecular
/ Genes
/ Genetic Variation
/ Genomes
/ Genomics
/ Intergenic DNA
/ Messenger RNA
/ Mutation
/ Mutation - genetics
/ natural selection
/ Regression Analysis
/ Selection, Genetic
/ sequence analysis
2012
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selective force favoring increased G+C content in bacterial genes
Journal Article
selective force favoring increased G+C content in bacterial genes
2012
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Overview
Bacteria display considerable variation in their overall base compositions, which range from 13% to over 75% G+C. This variation in genomic base compositions has long been considered to be a strictly neutral character, due solely to differences in the mutational process; however, recent sequence comparisons indicate that mutational input alone cannot produce the observed base compositions, implying a role for natural selection. Because bacterial genomes have high gene content, forces that operate on the base composition of individual genes could help shape the overall genomic base composition. To explore this possibility, we tested whether genes that encode the same protein but vary only in their base compositions at synonymous sites have effects on bacterial fitness. Escherichia coli strains harboring G+C-rich versions of genes display higher growth rates, indicating that despite a pervasive mutational bias toward A+T, a selective force, independent of adaptive codon use, is driving genes toward higher G+C contents.
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