ChloroMitoCU: Codon patterns across organelle genomes for functional genomics and evolutionary applications

Organelle genomes are widely thought to have arisen from reduction events involving cyanobacterial and archaeal genomes, in the case of chloroplasts, or α-proteobacterial genomes, in the case of mitochondria. Heterogeneity in base composition and codon preference has long been the subject of investi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inDNA research Vol. 24; no. 3; pp. 327 - 332
Main Authors Sablok, Gaurav, Chen, Ting-Wen, Lee, Chi-Ching, Yang, Chi, Gan, Ruei-Chi, Wegrzyn, Jill L., Porta, Nicola L., Nayak, Kinshuk C., Huang, Po-Jung, Varotto, Claudio, Tang, Petrus
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Oxford University Press 01.06.2017
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Organelle genomes are widely thought to have arisen from reduction events involving cyanobacterial and archaeal genomes, in the case of chloroplasts, or α-proteobacterial genomes, in the case of mitochondria. Heterogeneity in base composition and codon preference has long been the subject of investigation of topics ranging from phylogenetic distortion to the design of overexpression cassettes for transgenic expression. From the overexpression point of view, it is critical to systematically analyze the codon usage patterns of the organelle genomes. In light of the importance of codon usage patterns in the development of hyper-expression organelle transgenics, we present ChloroMitoCU, the first-ever curated, web-based reference catalog of the codon usage patterns in organelle genomes. ChloroMitoCU contains the pre-compiled codon usage patterns of 328 chloroplast genomes (29,960 CDS) and 3,502 mitochondrial genomes (49,066 CDS), enabling genome-wide exploration and comparative analysis of codon usage patterns across species. ChloroMitoCU allows the phylogenetic comparison of codon usage patterns across organelle genomes, the prediction of codon usage patterns based on user-submitted transcripts or assembled organelle genes, and comparative analysis with the pre-compiled patterns across species of interest. ChloroMitoCU can increase our understanding of the biased patterns of codon usage in organelle genomes across multiple clades. ChloroMitoCU can be accessed at: http://chloromitocu.cgu.edu.tw/.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
Edited by Prof. Kenta Nakai
These authors are contributed equally to the work.
ISSN:1340-2838
1756-1663
1756-1663
DOI:10.1093/dnares/dsw044