One of the biggest questions in science is how life arose from the
chemical soup that existed on early Earth. One theory is that RNA, a
close relative of DNA, was the first genetic molecule to arise around 4
billion years ago, but in a primitive form that later evolved into the
RNA and DNA molecules that we have in life today. New research shows one
way this chain of events might have started.
New study brings scientists closer to the origin of RNA
Atomic force microscopy image of structures formed by the the
self-assembly of TAP-ribose
nucleoside with cyanuric acid
Today, genetic information is stored in DNA. RNA is created from DNA to
put that information into action. RNA can direct the creation of
proteins and perform other essential functions of life that DNA can’t
do. RNA’s versatility is one reason that scientists think this polymer
came first, with DNA evolving later as a better way to store genetic
information for the long haul. But like DNA, RNA also could be a product
of evolution, scientists theorize.
Chemists at the Georgia Institute of Technology have shown how molecules
that may have been present on early Earth can self-assemble into
structures that could represent a starting point of RNA.
The spontaneous
formation of RNA building blocks is seen as a crucial step in the
origin of life, but one that scientists have struggled with for decades.
“In our study, we demonstrate a reaction that we see as important for
the formation of the earliest RNA-like molecules,” said Nicholas Hud,
professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry at Georgia Tech, where he’s also
the director of the Center for Chemical Evolution.
The study was published Dec. 14 online in the Journal of the American
Chemical Society. The research was funded by the National Science
Foundation and NASA.
RNA is perfect for the roles it plays in life today, Hud said, but
chemically it’s extraordinarily difficult to make. This suggests that
RNA evolved from simpler chemical couplings. As life became more
chemically complex and enzymes were born, evolutionary pressures would
have driven pre-RNA into the more refined modern RNA.
RNA is made of three chemical components: the sugar ribose, the bases
and phosphate. A ribose-base-phosphate unit links together with other
ribose-base-phosphate units to form an RNA polymer. Figuring out how the
bond between the bases and ribose first formed has been a difficult
problem to address in the origins of life field, Hud said.
In the study, Hud’s team investigated bases that are chemically related
to the bases of modern RNA, but that might be able to spontaneously bond
with ribose and assemble with other bases through the same interactions
that enable DNA and RNA to store information. They homed in on a
molecule called triaminopyrimidine (TAP).
The researchers mixed TAP with ribose under conditions meant to mimic a
drying pond on early Earth. TAP and ribose reacted together in high
yield, with up to 80 percent of TAP being converted into nucleosides,
which is the name for the ribose-base unit of RNA. Previous attempts to
form a ribose-base bond with the current RNA bases in similar reactions
had either failed or produced nucleosides in very low yields.
“This study is important in showing a feasible step for how we get the
start of an RNA-like molecule, but also how the building blocks of the
first RNA-like polymers could have found each other and self-assembled
in what would have been a very complex mixture of chemicals,” Hud said.
The researchers demonstrated this property of the TAP nucleosides by
adding another molecule to their reaction mixture, called cyanuric acid,
which is known to interact with TAP. Even in the unpurified reaction
mixture, noncovalent polymers formed with thousands of paired
nucleosides.
“It is amazing that these nucleosides and bases actually assemble on
their own, as life today requires complex enzymes to bring together RNA
building blocks and to spatially order them prior to
polymerization,”said Brian Cafferty, a graduate student at Georgia Tech
and co-author of the study.
The study demonstrated one possible way that the building blocks for an
ancestor of RNA could have come together on early Earth. TAP is an
intriguing candidate for one of the first bases that eventually led to
modern RNA molecules, but there are certainly others, Hud said.
Future work, in Hud’s lab and by other laboratories in the Center for
Chemical Evolution, will investigate the origins of RNA’s phosphate
backbone, as well as other pathways toward modern RNA.
“We’re looking for a simple, robust chemistry that can explain the
earliest origin of RNA or its ancestor,” Hud said.
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