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Codon Usage Bias for Fatty Acid Genes FAE1 and FAD2 in Oilseed Brassica Species

Authors :
Rajat Chaudhary
Subhash Chand
Bharath Kumar Alam
Prashant Yadav
Vijay Kamal Meena
Manoj Kumar Patel
Priya Pardeshi
Sanjay Singh Rathore
Yashpal Taak
Navinder Saini
Devendra Kumar Yadava
Sujata Vasudev
Source :
Sustainability; Volume 14; Issue 17; Pages: 11035
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2022.

Abstract

Codon usage bias (CUB) phenomenon varies with the species and even within the genes of the same species, where few codons are preferred more frequently than their other synonymous codons. It also categorizes the differences between species. Nucleotide compositional analysis reveals the molecular mechanisms of genes and the evolutionary relationship of a gene in dissimilar plant species. In the present study, three orthologous sequences of each FAE1 (FAE1.1, FAE1.2, and FAE1.3) and FAD2 (FAD2.1, FAD2.2, and FAD2.3) genes, from six Brassica species were accessed using the GenBank database. Further, CUB-related parameters such as nucleotide composition (AT and GC content), relative synonymous codon usage (RSCU), the effective number of codons (ENC), frequency of optimal codons (Fop), relative codon usage bias (RCBS), neutrality plot (GC12 vs. GC3), parity rule-2 [(A3/(A3 + T3) vs. (G3/(G3 + C3)], and correspondence analysis (COA) were analyzed to compare codon bias in U’s triangle Brassica species. The FAE1 genes were AT-biased and FAD2 genes were GC-biased across the studied Brassica species. RSCU values indicated that both the genes had moderate codon usage frequency for selected amino acids. The evolutionary study confirmed that codon usage preference is similar within the species grouped into the same cluster for FAE1; however, B. nigra performed differently for FAD2.2 orthologue. The high ENC value, low Fop, and RSCU value highlighted that FAE1 and FAD2 genes had a low level of gene expression and moderate preference for codon usage across the Brassicas. In addition, neutrality plot, parity rule, and correspondence analysis revealed that natural selection pressure had significantly contributed to CUB for FAE1 genes, whereas mutation and selection pressure occurred for FAD2 genes. This study would help to decode codon optimization, improve the level of expression of exogenous genes, and transgenic engineering to increase fatty acid profiling for the betterment of seed oil in Brassica species.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20711050
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Sustainability; Volume 14; Issue 17; Pages: 11035
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b78633e859cf0f463847dc554af8e161
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/su141711035