The sequence asymmetry of the Escherichiacolichromosome appears to be independent of strand or function and may be evolutionarily conserved
Open Access
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Nucleic Acids Research
- Vol. 17 (14) , 5547-5564
- https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/17.14.5547
Abstract
I have examined potential determinants of the asymmetric distribution of nucleotide sequences in the genome of Escherichia coli as cataloged in GenBank release 44. I have used the frequency of occurrence of all possible tetranucleotides in a given sequence catalog or derivative as a comparative measure of asymmetry. The GenBank-cataloged strand and its complement show statistically similar (not complementary) distributions. The distribution is statistically similar in comparisons between the protein coding subset and the total genome, the coding subset and selected non-coding genes, the coding subset and the remainder of the DNA, and the coding subset and stable RNA sequences. I have compared the distribution in the genome of E. coli with the distributions found in the cataloged genomes of Salmonella typhimurium, Bacillus subtilis, and of coliphages lambda and T7. The distribution summed in both strands of the cataloged DNA differs statistically only in comparisons with lytic bacteriophage T7 because only the two strands of T7 show statistically dissimilar distributions. Despite similarities in tetranucleotide distribution, the pattern of codon complementarity in B. subtilis is different than that documented for E. coli. Thus, sequence asymmetry does not seem related to specific DNA function or to documented similarities or differences in codon bias. The sequence asymmetry of the E. coli genome may thus reflect a hitherto unsuspected pattern impressed on both strands of DNA which is or can be packaged into bacterial genomes.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bacterial evolution.1987
- The effect of codon usage on the oligonucleotide composition of the E.coli genome and identification of over-and underepresented sequences by Markow chain analysisNucleic Acids Research, 1987
- Mono-through hexanucleotide composition of the Escherichia coli genome: a Markov chain analysisNucleic Acids Research, 1987
- Restriction endonucleases for pulsed field mapping of bacterial genomesNucleic Acids Research, 1987
- Compositional constraints and genome evolutionJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1986
- Sense codons are found in specific contextsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1985
- Selection pressures on codon usage in the complete genome of bacteriophage T7Journal of Molecular Evolution, 1985
- Evidence for a coding pattern on the non-coding strand of theE. coligenomeNucleic Acids Research, 1984
- Detailed analysis of the higher-order structure of 16S-like ribosomal ribonucleic acids.1983
- A computer program to search for tRNA genes.1980