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      A Kinetic Model of Nonenzymatic RNA Polymerization by Cytidine-5′-phosphoro-2-aminoimidazolide

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      Biochemistry
      American Chemical Society

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          Abstract

          The nonenzymatic polymerization of RNA may have enabled copying of functional sequences during the origin of life. Recent progress utilizing 5′-phosphoro-2-aminoimidazole activation has reinvigorated the possibility of using nonenzymatic RNA polymerization for copying arbitrary sequences. However, the reasons why 2-aminoimidazole (AI) is a superior activation group remain unclear. Here we report that the predominant mechanism of polymerization using cytidine-5′-phosphoro-2-aminoimidazolide (Cp*) involves a 2-aminoimidazolium-bridged dinucleotide (Cp*pC) intermediate. To explore the role of this intermediate, we first identify and quantify four reactions involving the synthesis and breakdown of Cp*pC that occur in the absence of the primer–template duplex. We then analyze the dependence of the rate of polymerization on the concentration of the Cp*pC intermediate in the presence and absence of the competitive inhibitor Cp. We also show that the contribution of the monomer Cp* to the polymerization rate is negligible under our primer extension conditions. Finally, we use the experimentally determined rate constants of these reactions to develop a kinetic model that helps explain the changing rate of nonenzymatic RNA polymerization over time. Our model accounts for the concentration of Cp*pC formed by Cp* under primer extension conditions. The model does not completely account for the decline in polymerization rate observed over long times, which indicates that additional important inhibitory processes have not yet been identified. Our results suggest that the superiority of 2-aminoimidazole over the traditional 2-methylimidazole activation is mostly due to the higher level of accumulation of the imidazolium-bridged intermediate under primer extension conditions.

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          Prebiotic chemistry and the origin of the RNA world.

          The demonstration that ribosomal peptide synthesis is a ribozyme-catalyzed reaction makes it almost certain that there was once an RNA World. The central problem for origin-of-life studies, therefore, is to understand how a protein-free RNA World became established on the primitive Earth. We first review the literature on the prebiotic synthesis of the nucleotides, the nonenzymatic synthesis and copying of polynucleotides, and the selection of ribozyme catalysts of a kind that might have facilitated polynucleotide replication. This leads to a brief outline of the Molecular Biologists' Dream, an optimistic scenario for the origin of the RNA World. In the second part of the review we point out the many unresolved problems presented by the Molecular Biologists' Dream. This in turn leads to a discussion of genetic systems simpler than RNA that might have "invented" RNA. Finally, we review studies of prebiotic membrane formation.
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            The origins of the RNA world.

            The general notion of an "RNA World" is that, in the early development of life on the Earth, genetic continuity was assured by the replication of RNA and genetically encoded proteins were not involved as catalysts. There is now strong evidence indicating that an RNA World did indeed exist before DNA- and protein-based life. However, arguments regarding whether life on Earth began with RNA are more tenuous. It might be imagined that all of the components of RNA were available in some prebiotic pool, and that these components assembled into replicating, evolving polynucleotides without the prior existence of any evolved macromolecules. A thorough consideration of this "RNA-first" view of the origin of life must reconcile concerns regarding the intractable mixtures that are obtained in experiments designed to simulate the chemistry of the primitive Earth. Perhaps these concerns will eventually be resolved, and recent experimental findings provide some reason for optimism. However, the problem of the origin of the RNA World is far from being solved, and it is fruitful to consider the alternative possibility that RNA was preceded by some other replicating, evolving molecule, just as DNA and proteins were preceded by RNA.
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              The origin of RNA and "my grandfather's axe".

              The origin of RNA is one of the most formidable problems facing prebiotic chemists. We consider RNA as a product of evolution, as opposed to the more conventional view of RNA as originally being the product of abiotic processes. We have come to accept that life's informational polymers have changed in chemical structure since their emergence, which presents a quandary similar to the paradox of "My Grandfather's Axe". Here, we discuss reasons why all contemporary components of RNA--the nucleobases, ribose, and phosphate--are not likely the original components of the first informational polymer(s) of life. We also evaluate three distinct models put forth as pathways for how the earliest informational polymers might have assembled. We see the quest to uncover the ancestors of RNA as an exciting scientific journey, one that is already providing additional chemical constraints on the origin of life and one that has the potential to produce self-assembling materials, novel catalysis, and bioactive compounds. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biochemistry
                Biochemistry
                bi
                bichaw
                Biochemistry
                American Chemical Society
                0006-2960
                1520-4995
                12 October 2017
                31 October 2017
                : 56
                : 43
                : 5739-5747
                Affiliations
                Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Molecular Biology, and Center for Computational and Integrative Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital , Boston, Massachusetts 02114, United States
                Author notes
                Article
                10.1021/acs.biochem.7b00792
                6340129
                29022704
                21e8942e-b915-4a08-967b-3192158de2f4
                Copyright © 2017 American Chemical Society

                This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License, which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes.

                History
                : 16 August 2017
                : 09 October 2017
                Categories
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                Custom metadata
                bi7b00792
                bi-2017-00792z

                Biochemistry
                Biochemistry

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