PLoS Genetics (Oct 2020)
Selection for ancient periodic motifs that do not impart DNA bending.
Abstract
A ~10-11 bp periodicity in dinucleotides imparting DNA bending, with shorter periods found in organisms with positively-supercoiled DNA and longer periods found in organisms with negatively-supercoiled DNA, was previously suggested to assist in DNA compaction. However, when measured with more robust methods, variation in the observed periods between organisms with different growth temperatures is not consistent with that hypothesis. We demonstrate that dinucleotide periodicity does not arise solely by mutational biases but is under selection. We found variation between genomes in both the period and the suite of dinucleotides that are periodic. Whereas organisms with similar growth temperatures have highly variable periods, differences in periods increase with phylogenetic distance between organisms. In addition, while the suites of dinucleotides under selection for periodicity become more dissimilar among more distantly-related organisms, there is a core set of dinucleotides that are strongly periodic among genomes in all domains of life. Notably, this core set of periodic motifs are not involved in DNA bending. These data indicate that dinucleotide periodicity is an ancient genomic architecture which may play a role in shaping the evolution of genes and genomes.