A Potential Role for Aminoacylation in Primordial
RNA Copying Chemistry
Posted on 2021-02-01 - 21:15
Aminoacylated tRNAs
are the substrates for ribosomal protein synthesis
in all branches of life, implying an ancient origin for aminoacylation
chemistry. In the 1970s, Orgel and colleagues reported potentially
prebiotic routes to aminoacylated nucleotides and their RNA-templated
condensation to form amino acid-bridged dinucleotides. However, it
is unclear whether such reactions would have aided or impeded non-enzymatic
RNA replication. Determining whether aminoacylated RNAs could have
been advantageous in evolution prior to the emergence of protein synthesis
remains a key challenge. We therefore tested the ability of aminoacylated
RNA to participate in both templated primer extension and ligation
reactions. We find that at low magnesium concentrations that favor
fatty acid-based protocells, these reactions proceed orders of magnitude
more rapidly than when initiated from the cis-diol
of unmodified RNA. We further demonstrate that amino acid-bridged
RNAs can act as templates in a subsequent round of copying. Our results
suggest that aminoacylation facilitated non-enzymatic RNA replication,
thus outlining a potentially primordial functional link between aminoacylation
chemistry and RNA replication.
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Radakovic, Aleksandar; Wright, Tom H.; Lelyveld, Victor S.; Szostak, Jack W. (2021). A Potential Role for Aminoacylation in Primordial
RNA Copying Chemistry. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.0c00943