Ratio of carbon and nitrogen in amino acid (discovered by analysis of primary sequence of more than 2000 viral proteins)

Range C:N is 3.6:1 unitless
Organism Virus
Reference Weitz, Joshua S. Quantitative Viral Ecology, Dynamics of Viruses and Their Microbial Hosts, Princeton University press, Chapter one. What Is a Virus? p.13 2nd paragraph
Primary Source Jover, L. F., Effler, T. C., Buchan, A., Wilhelm, S. W., and Weitz, J. S. (2014). The el- emental composition of virus particles: implications for marine biogeochemical cycles. Nature Reviews Microbiology , 12:519–528 doi: 10.1038/nrmicro3289.PubMed ID24931044
Comments P.13 2nd paragraph: "In contrast (to average molecular formula of DNA base pair, see BNID 113052), the amino acids that constitute proteins have no phosphorus, but they do contain carbon and nitrogen—again, the particular ratio depends on amino acid composition. Analysis of primary sequence information for more than 2000 viral proteins reveals that they have, on average, 31 molecules of carbon and 8.7 molecules of nitrogen/nm^3 of protein (primary source) that is, a C:N ratio of 3.6:1—slightly more carbon rich and nitrogen poor than DNA."
Entered by Uri M
ID 113053