African Journal of
Biotechnology

  • Abbreviation: Afr. J. Biotechnol.
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 1684-5315
  • DOI: 10.5897/AJB
  • Start Year: 2002
  • Published Articles: 12487

Full Length Research Paper

Genomic composition factors affect codon usage in porcine genome

Khobondo, J. O.*
  • Khobondo, J. O.*
  • Animal Breeding and Genomics Group, Department of Animal Sciences, Egerton University, P. O. Box 536, 20115 Egerton, Kenya.
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Okeno, T. O.
  • Okeno, T. O.
  • Animal Breeding and Genomics Group, Department of Animal Sciences, Egerton University, P. O. Box 536, 20115 Egerton, Kenya; Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Center for Quantitative Genetics and Genomics, Aarhus University, P. O. Box 50, 8830 Tjele, Denmark.
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Kahi, A. K.
  • Kahi, A. K.
  • Animal Breeding and Genomics Group, Department of Animal Sciences, Egerton University, P. O. Box 536, 20115 Egerton, Kenya.
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  •  Received: 18 August 2014
  •  Accepted: 15 January 2015
  •  Published: 28 January 2015

Abstract

The objective of the study was to determine the codon usage bias in the porcine genome and decipher its determinants. To investigate the underlying mechanisms of codon bias, the coding sequence (CDS) from the swine reference sequence (ssc10.2) was extracted using Biomart. An in house built Perl script was used to derive various genomic traits and codon indices. Analysis was done using R statistical package, and correlations and multivariate regressions were performed. We report the existence of codon usage bias that might suggest existence of weak translational selection. The codon bias is feebly related to nucleotide composition (GC%, GC3, CDS length). This study can be explored for designing degenerate primers, necessitate selecting appropriate hosts expression systems to manipulate the expression of target genes in vivo or in vitro and improve the accuracy of gene prediction from genomic sequences thus maximizing the effectiveness of genetic manipulations in synthetic biology.

 

Key words: Coding sequence, synomynous codons, selection, translational mutation, pig genome.