Litcius/Paper detail

Amino Acid Modified RNA Bases as Building Blocks of an Early Earth RNA‐Peptide World

Milda Nainytė, Felix Müller, Giacomo Ganazzoli, Chun‐Yin Chan, Antony L. Crisp, Daniel Globisch, Thomas Carell

2020Chemistry - A European Journal24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fossils of extinct species allow us to reconstruct the process of Darwinian evolution that led to the species diversity we see on Earth today. The origin of the first functional molecules able to undergo molecular evolution and thus eventually able to create life, are largely unknown. The most prominent idea in the field posits that biology was preceded by an era of molecular evolution, in which RNA molecules encoded information and catalysed their own replication. This RNA world concept stands against other hypotheses, that argue for example that life may have begun with catalytic peptides and primitive metabolic cycles. The question whether RNA or peptides were first is addressed by the RNA-peptide world concept, which postulates a parallel existence of both molecular species. A plausible experimental model of how such an RNA-peptide world may have looked like, however, is absent. Here we report the synthesis and physicochemical evaluation of amino acid containing adenosine bases, which are closely related to molecules that are found today in the anticodon stem-loop of tRNAs from all three kingdoms of life. We show that these adenosines lose their base pairing properties, which allow them to equip RNA with amino acids independent of the sequence context. As such we may consider them to be living molecular fossils of an extinct molecular RNA-peptide world.

Topics & Concepts

RNAAbiogenesisRNA world hypothesisBiologyContext (archaeology)Ligase ribozymeAmino acidRibozymeTransfer RNARNA editingDarwinismComputational biologyEvolutionary biologyGeneticsGenePaleontologyRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesOrigins and Evolution of Life