First principles of population genetics are used to obtain formulae relating the non-synonymous to synonymous substitution rate ratio to the selection coefficients acting at codon sites in protein-coding genes. Two theoretical cases are discussed and two examples from real data (a chloroplast gene and a virus polymerase) are given. The formulae give much insight into the dynamics of non-synonymous substitutions and may inform the development of methods to detect adaptive evolution.
CITATION STYLE
Dos Reis, M. (2015). How to calculate the non-synonymous to synonymous rate ratio of protein-coding genes under the fisher-wright mutation-selection framework. Biology Letters, 11(4). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2014.1031
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