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Modified nucleotides may have enhanced early RNA catalysis

Steven K. Wolk, Wesley S. Mayfield, Amy D. Gelinas, David P. Astling, J. C. Guillot, Edward N. Brody, Nebojša Janjić, Larry Gold

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The modern version of the RNA World Hypothesis begins with activated ribonucleotides condensing (nonenzymatically) to make RNA molecules, some of which possess (perhaps slight) catalytic activity. We propose that noncanonical ribonucleotides, which would have been inevitable under prebiotic conditions, might decrease the RNA length required to have useful catalytic function by allowing short RNAs to possess a more versatile collection of folded motifs. We argue that modified versions of the standard bases, some with features that resemble cofactors, could have facilitated that first moment in which early RNA molecules with catalytic capability began their evolutionary path toward self-replication.

Topics & Concepts

RNARNA world hypothesisNucleotideComputational biologyNon-coding RNACatalysisChemistryBiologyBiochemistryRibozymeGeneRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsOrigins and Evolution of LifeDNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry
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