Abstract.
The extent to which base composition and codon usage vary among RNA viruses, and the possible causes of this bias, is undetermined in most cases. A maximum-likelihood statistical method was used to test whether base composition and codon usage bias covary with arthropod association in the genus Flavivirus, a major source of disease in humans and animals. Flaviviruses are transmitted by mosquitoes, by ticks, or directly between vertebrate hosts. Those viruses associated with ticks were found to have a significantly lower G+C content than non-vector-borne flaviviruses and this difference was present throughout the genome at all amino acids and codon positions. In contrast, mosquito-borne viruses had an intermediate G+C content which was not significantly different from those of the other two groups. In addition, biases in dinucleotide and codon usage that were independent of base composition were detected in all flaviviruses, but these did not covary with arthropod association. However, the overall effect of these biases was slight, suggesting only weak selection at synonymous sites. A preliminary analysis of base composition, codon usage, and vector specificity in other RNA virus families also revealed a possible association between base composition and vector specificity, although with biases different from those seen in the Flavivirus genus.
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Received: 29 August 2000 / Accepted: 19 December 2000
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Jenkins, G., Pagel, M., Gould, E. et al. Evolution of Base Composition and Codon Usage Bias in the Genus Flavivirus . J Mol Evol 52, 383–390 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002390010168
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002390010168