Translationally optimal codons associate with aggregationâprone sites in proteins
- 1 October 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Proteomics
- Vol. 10 (23), 4163-4171
- https://doi.org/10.1002/pmic.201000229
Abstract
We analyze the relationship between codon usage bias and residue aggregation propensity in the genomes of four model organisms, Escherichia coli, yeast, fly, and mouse, as well as the archaeon Halobacterium species NRCâ1. Using the MantelâHaenszel procedure, we find that translationally optimal codons associate with aggregationâprone residues. Our results are qualitatively and quantitatively similar to those of an earlier study where we found an association between translationally optimal codons and buried residues. We also combine the aggregationâpropensity data with solventâaccessibility data. Although the resulting data set is small, and hence statistical power low, results indicate that the association between optimal codons and aggregationâprone residues exists both at buried and at exposed sites. By comparing codon usage at different combinations of sites (exposed, aggregationâprone sites versus buried, nonâaggregationâprone sites; buried, aggregationâprone sites versus exposed, nonâaggregationâprone sites), we find that aggregation propensity and solvent accessibility seem to have independent effects of (on average) comparable magnitude on codon usage. Finally, in fly, we assess whether optimal codons associate with sites at which amino acid substitutions lead to an increase in aggregation propensity, and find only a very weak effect. These results suggest that optimal codons may be required to reduce the frequency of translation errors at aggregationâprone sites that coincide with certain functional sites, such as proteinâprotein interfaces. Alternatively, optimal codons may be required for rapid translation of aggregationâprone regions.Keywords
Funding Information
- NIH Grant (R01 GM088344)
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