Codon Bias Patterns of $E.coli$'s Interacting Proteins
Maddalena Dilucca, Giulio Cimini, Andrea Semmoloni, Antonio Deiana,, Andrea Giansanti

TL;DR
This study introduces a new codon bias index, $CompAI$, based on tRNA competition, and demonstrates its effectiveness in revealing evolutionary, functional, and interaction network relationships in $E.coli$.
Contribution
The paper presents $CompAI$, a novel codon bias index that better captures translation dynamics and correlates with gene essentiality, conservation, and protein interaction networks in $E.coli$.
Findings
$CompAI$ correlates with gene conservation and essentiality.
Genes with similar codon bias tend to encode interacting proteins.
$CompAI$ distribution is coherent across protein interaction communities.
Abstract
Synonymous codons, i.e., DNA nucleotide triplets coding for the same amino acid, are used differently across the variety of living organisms. The biological meaning of this phenomenon, known as codon usage bias, is still controversial. In order to shed light on this point, we propose a new codon bias index, , that is based on the competition between cognate and near-cognate tRNAs during translation, without being tuned to the usage bias of highly expressed genes. We perform a genome-wide evaluation of codon bias for , comparing with other widely used indices: , , and . We show that and capture similar information by being positively correlated with gene conservation, measured by ERI, and essentiality, whereas, and appear to be less sensitive to evolutionary-functional parameters. Notably, the rate of variation of and…
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