Nucleotide and codon usage biases involved in the evolution of African swine fever virus: A comparative genomics analysis

Author:

Pu Feiyang12,Wang Rui3,Yang Xuanye12,Hu Xinyan12,Wang Jinqian12,Zhang Lijuan2,Zhao Yongqing12,Zhang Derong12,Liu Zewen12,Liu Junlin12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biomedical Research Center Northwest Minzu University Lanzhou China

2. College of Life Science and Engineering Northwest Minzu University Lanzhou Gansu China

3. Viterbi School of Engineering University of Southern California Los Angeles California USA

Abstract

AbstractSince African swine fever virus (ASFV) replication is closely related to its host's machinery, codon usage of viral genome can be subject to selection pressures. A better understanding of codon usage can give new insights into viral evolution. We implemented information entropy and revealed that the nucleotide usage pattern of ASFV is significantly associated with viral isolation factors (region and time), especially the usages of thymine and cytosine. Despite the domination of adenine and thymine in the viral genome, we found that mutation pressure alters the overall codon usage pattern of ASFV, followed by selective forces from natural selection. Moreover, the nucleotide skew index at the gene level indicates that nucleotide usages influencing synonymous codon bias of ASFV are significantly correlated with viral protein hydropathy. Finally, evolutionary plasticity is proved to contribute to the weakness in synonymous codons with A‐ or T‐end serving as optimal codons of ASFV, suggesting that fine‐tuning translation selection plays a role in synonymous codon usages of ASFV for adapting host. Taken together, ASFV is subject to evolutionary dynamics on nucleotide selections and synonymous codon usage, and our detailed analysis offers deeper insights into the genetic characteristics of this newly emerging virus around the world.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine

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