Causes and Effects of N-Terminal Codon Bias in Bacterial Genes
Harvard University · Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
Abstract
Most amino acids are encoded by multiple codons, and codon choice has strong effects on protein expression. Rare codons are enriched at the N terminus of genes in most organisms, although the causes and effects of this bias are unclear. Here, we measure expression from >14,000 synthetic reporters in Escherichia coli and show that using N-terminal rare codons instead of common ones increases expression by ~14-fold (median 4-fold). We quantify how individual N-terminal codons affect expression and show that these effects shape the sequence of natural genes. Finally, we demonstrate that reduced RNA structure and not codon rarity itself is responsible for expression increases. Our observations resolve…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.88
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 34
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Terminal (telecommunication)
- Genetics
- Gene
- Codon usage bias
- Biology
- Computational biology
- Computer science
- Genome