PeerJ (Nov 2017)

Kullback Leibler divergence in complete bacterial and phage genomes

  • Sajia Akhter,
  • Ramy K. Aziz,
  • Mona T. Kashef,
  • Eslam S. Ibrahim,
  • Barbara Bailey,
  • Robert A. Edwards

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4026
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
p. e4026

Abstract

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The amino acid content of the proteins encoded by a genome may predict the coding potential of that genome and may reflect lifestyle restrictions of the organism. Here, we calculated the Kullback–Leibler divergence from the mean amino acid content as a metric to compare the amino acid composition for a large set of bacterial and phage genome sequences. Using these data, we demonstrate that (i) there is a significant difference between amino acid utilization in different phylogenetic groups of bacteria and phages; (ii) many of the bacteria with the most skewed amino acid utilization profiles, or the bacteria that host phages with the most skewed profiles, are endosymbionts or parasites; (iii) the skews in the distribution are not restricted to certain metabolic processes but are common across all bacterial genomic subsystems; (iv) amino acid utilization profiles strongly correlate with GC content in bacterial genomes but very weakly correlate with the G+C percent in phage genomes. These findings might be exploited to distinguish coding from non-coding sequences in large data sets, such as metagenomic sequence libraries, to help in prioritizing subsequent analyses.

Keywords