Information and the evolution of codon bias


Autoria(s): Wright, Daniel T.
Contribuinte(s)

Gasser, Les

Gasser, Les

Renear, Allen H.

Luthey-Schulten, Zaida A.

Efron, Miles J.

Data(s)

25/08/2011

25/08/2011

25/08/2011

01/08/2011

Resumo

The informational properties of biological systems are the subject of much debate and research. I present a general argument in favor of the existence and central importance of information in organisms, followed by a case study of the genetic code (specifically, codon bias) and the translation system from the perspective of information. The codon biases of 831 Bacteria and Archeae are analyzed and modeled as points in a 64-dimensional statistical space. The major results are that (1) codon bias evolution does not follow canonical patterns, and (2) the use of coding space in organsims is a subset of the total possible coding space. These findings imply that codon bias is a unique adaptive mechanism that owes its existence to organisms' use of information in representing genes, and that there is a particularly biological character to the resulting biased coding and information use.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26089

Idioma(s)

en

Direitos

Copyright 2011 by Daniel T. Wright. All rights reserved.

Palavras-Chave #Information Science #Philosophy of Information #Evolution #Genetic Code #codon bias #biological information