| Literature DB >> 30343671 |
Kun Zhao1, Elizabeth Henderson2, Kelley Bullard3, M Steven Oberste2, Cara C Burns2, Jaume Jorba2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Determining patterns of nucleotide and amino acid substitution is the first step during sequence evolution analysis. However, it is not easy to visualize the different phylogenetic signatures imprinted in aligned nucleotide and amino acid sequences.Entities:
Keywords: Bioinformatics; MATLAB; Molecular evolution; PAML; Phylogenetics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30343671 PMCID: PMC6196406 DOI: 10.1186/s12859-018-2335-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Fig. 1Transition and transversion substitutions (y-axis) at each base position (x-axis) stratified to three codon positions. Data from a survey of wild poliovirus sequences [2]
Fig. 2Distribution of all types of transitions and transversion substitutions at each codon position. Data from a survey of wild poliovirus sequences [2]
Fig. 3Count of synonymous and nonsynonymous substitutions at each base position. Transitions and transversions were plotted separately. Data from a survey of wild poliovirus sequences [2]
Fig. 4Synonymous substitutions, nonsynonymous substitutions and dN/dS ratio over a sliding window. Upper plot: Dynamics of accumulation of synonymous and non-synonymous substitutions along the sequence interval according to user-defined sliding windows. Lower plot: Estimated dN/dS ratios for each user-defined sliding window. Data from a survey of wild poliovirus sequences [2]
Fig. 5dN/dS ratios estimated from different poliovirus data sets. Upper plot: Wild poliovirus (31 sequences) [2]. Middle: circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus (> 300 sequences) [3]. Lower plot: Immunodeficiency-related vaccine-derived polioviruses (8 sequences) [10]
Fig. 6Annotation of a phylogenetic tree with inferred substitutions in external and internal branches. The sequences that have transitions in second position are highlighted in red. For example, the nucleotide substitutions that lead to nonsynonymous mutations are reported as “18_1@Ts1_3@Ts2_2@Tv1”. This means that sequence #18 has one transition (Ts) at the first codon position, three Ts at the second codon position and two transversions at the first codon position