Back to Search
Start Over
RNA catalysis, thermodynamics and the origin of life
- Source :
- Scott, WG; Szöke, A; Blaustein, J; O'Rourke, SM; & Robertson, MP. (2014). RNA catalysis, thermodynamics and the origin of life. Life, 4(2), 131-141. doi: 10.3390/life4020131. UC Santa Cruz: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/3dg5r4bv, Life (Basel, Switzerland), vol 4, iss 2, Life : Open Access Journal, Life, Vol 4, Iss 2, Pp 131-141 (2014)
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- eScholarship, University of California, 2014.
-
Abstract
- The RNA World Hypothesis posits that the first self-replicating molecules were RNAs. RNA self-replicases are, in general, assumed to have employed nucleotide 5'-polyphosphates (or their analogues) as substrates for RNA polymerization. The mechanism by which these substrates might be synthesized with sufficient abundance to supply a growing and evolving population of RNAs is problematic for evolutionary hypotheses because non-enzymatic synthesis and assembly of nucleotide 5'-triphosphates (or other analogously activated phosphodiester species) is inherently difficult. However, nucleotide 2',3'-cyclic phosphates are also phosphodiesters, and are the natural and abundant products of RNA degradation. These have previously been dismissed as viable substrates for prebiotic RNA synthesis. We propose that the arguments for their dismissal are based on a flawed assumption, and that nucleotide 2',3'-cyclic phosphates in fact possess several significant, advantageous properties that indeed make them particularly viable substrates for prebiotic RNA synthesis. An RNA World hypothesis based upon the polymerization of nucleotide 2',3'-cyclic phosphates possesses additional explanatory power in that it accounts for the observed ribozyme "fossil record", suggests a viable mechanism for substrate transport across lipid vesicle boundaries of primordial proto-cells, circumvents the problems of substrate scarcity and implausible synthetic pathways, provides for a primitive but effective RNA replicase editing mechanism, and definitively explains why RNA, rather than DNA, must have been the original catalyst. Finally, our analysis compels us to propose that a fundamental and universal property that drives the evolution of living systems, as well as pre-biotic replicating molecules (be they composed of RNA or protein), is that they exploit chemical reactions that already possess competing kinetically-preferred and thermodynamically-preferred pathways in a manner that optimizes the balance between the two types of pathways. © 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
- Subjects :
- RNA world
Population
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
Computational biology
ribozymes
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
chemistry.chemical_compound
nucleotide 2ʹ,3ʹ-cyclic phosphates
Abiogenesis
Genetics
lcsh:Science
education
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Ligase ribozyme
RNA polymerization
education.field_of_study
biology
Ribozyme
Paleontology
RNA
RNA self-replication
Hypothesis
chemistry
Space and Planetary Science
Phosphodiester bond
biology.protein
lcsh:Q
Generic health relevance
DNA
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Scott, WG; Szöke, A; Blaustein, J; O'Rourke, SM; & Robertson, MP. (2014). RNA catalysis, thermodynamics and the origin of life. Life, 4(2), 131-141. doi: 10.3390/life4020131. UC Santa Cruz: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/3dg5r4bv, Life (Basel, Switzerland), vol 4, iss 2, Life : Open Access Journal, Life, Vol 4, Iss 2, Pp 131-141 (2014)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ebca9b5840ea958cac746618a1b4e6c5
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3390/life4020131.