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20.9: Experimental Evidence for an RNA World

  • Page ID
    89048
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    There is some circumstantial evidence for at least one organic autocatalyst as a candidate precursor to an RNA world. There is also evidence that the prebiotic chemistries could have supported the linkage of bases to sugars to make nucleosides (see Prebiotic Ribonucleotide Synthesis). Also, cyclic nucleotides (e.g., cAMP) were shown to be stable in hot water ( Stable Prebiotic cAMP). Could cyclic nucleotides have served as substrates for prebiotic RNA synthesis? In fact, investigators probing an RNA world hypothesis reported the requirements for RNA replication in a test tube. Adding salt, magnesium ions, a bit of RNA primer and A, U, G and C (precursor bases to RNA) to a buffered basic solution resulted in RNA synthesis… without an RNA polymerase! The reaction was slow and prone to error. But RNA was synthesized against the primer in a simple solution, the kind that might have been found on Earth at life’s beginnings. The study further found that adding the base inosine to the reactions increased the rate as well as the accuracy of RNA replication under what were otherwise the same conditions. Of course, this is not what happens today! First, the bases are part of nucleosides and nucleotides that are the actual precursors of replication. And, while inosine is in fact found in some tRNAs, it does not result from the use of inosine nucleotide precursors, but from the chemical modification (deamination) of adenine bases already in the transcript as seen in Figure 20.13 (below).

    Screen Shot 2022-05-26 at 12.11.57 PM.png
    Figure 20.13: The deamination of adenine in a ribonucleotide chain to inosine in a tRNA by the adenine deaminase enzyme.

    OK, calling inosine the “missing ingredient” in life’s origins might be hyperbole. Still, if cell-free RNA synthesis using nucleobases is more efficient with inosine than without it, could inosine have participated in an early RNA world at life’s origins, to be replaced later by our DNA world? Read more about possible roles for inosine or other unusual bases in a prebiotic RNA world at Inosine-a Missing Ingredient in the Origin-of Life?.

    CHALLENGE

    Inosine has an unusual property in tRNAs. Remind yourself of (or look up) that property and consider how it might have enhanced an early role for the base in life’s origins.


    This page titled 20.9: Experimental Evidence for an RNA World is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Gerald Bergtrom.

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