DoesEscherichia coliOptimize the Economics of the translation Process?
โ Scribed by Jean Solomovici; Thierry Lesnik; Claude Reiss
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 262 KB
- Volume
- 185
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The codon translation rate is usually assumed to be proportional to the cellular concentration of the cognate tRNA, but synonymous codons sharing the same cognate tRNA may be translated at rather different rates. To account for the latter observation, we assume that the translation process is optimized in two respects: (i), the codon demand is optimized with respect to the supply of cognate tRNAs (composition of the tRNA pool); and (ii), for synonymous codons sharing the same cognate tRNA, the usage frequency of each codon correlates optimally with the stability of the codon-anticodon complex. These assumptions allow us to compute the relative rate constants of synonymous codons. Highly expressed genes, which produce 80-90% of the protein mass in the E. coli cell, appear to have selected codons which make an optimal use of the tRNA pool. Assuming the optimization criteria were valid, a list of codon translation times (in ms) were derived from available experimental data.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
People have self-control problems: We pursue immediate gratiยฎcation in a way that we ourselves do not appreciate in the long run. Only recently have economists considered the behavioral and welfare implications of such time-inconsistent preferences. This paper outlines a simple formal model of self-
Why is block pricing included in the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's (FERC's) Order No. 436? What is its role in this overall scheme of things? Understanding the rationale for block pricing requires some knowledge of how the economics work in rolledin pricing and how they work in block pricin