| Literature DB >> 30456440 |
Calvin M Runnels1, Kathryn A Lanier1, Justin Krish Williams1, Jessica C Bowman1, Anton S Petrov1, Nicholas V Hud1, Loren Dean Williams2.
Abstract
Life as we know it requires three basic types of polymers: polypeptide, polynucleotide, and polysaccharide. Here we evaluate both universal and idiosyncratic characteristics of these biopolymers. We incorporate this information into a model that explains much about their origins, selection, and early evolution. We observe that all three biopolymer types are pre-organized, conditionally self-complementary, chemically unstable in aqueous media yet persistent because of kinetic trapping, with chiral monomers and directional chains. All three biopolymers are synthesized by dehydration reactions that are catalyzed by molecular motors driven by hydrolysis of phosphorylated nucleosides. All three biopolymers can access specific states that protect against hydrolysis. These protected states are folded, using self-complementary interactions among recurrent folding elements within a given biopolymer, or assembled, in associations between the same or different biopolymer types. Self-association in a hydrolytic environment achieves self-preservation. Heterogeneous association achieves partner-preservation. These universal properties support a model in which life's polymers emerged simultaneously and co-evolved in a common hydrolytic milieu where molecular persistence depended on folding and assembly. We believe that an understanding of the structure, function, and origins of any given type of biopolymer requires the context of other biopolymers.Entities:
Keywords: Assembly; Carbohydrate; Folding; Polynucleotide; Protein; Self-complementarity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30456440 PMCID: PMC6267704 DOI: 10.1007/s00239-018-9876-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Evol ISSN: 0022-2844 Impact factor: 2.395
Biopolymer Universalities and Idiosyncrasies
| Attribute | Polynucleotide | Polypeptide | Polyglucose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary proficiency | Maintain, record, and transduce information, catalyze chemical reactions | Catalyze and regulate chemical reactions, provide physical structure | Provide physical structure, energy storage, and recognition |
| Conditional self-complementarityU | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Condition for self-complementarity | Nucleotide sequence | Amino acid composition | Linkage stereochemistry (β- vs. α-anomer) |
| Small number of types of folding elementsU | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Folding element identities | Nitrogenous bases | Peptide linkage | Cyclic glucose |
| Enzymatic capability | Moderate | High | Low |
| Sidechain diversity | Low: four planer nitrogenous bases | High: 20 amino acid sidechains | N/A: no sidechains |
| Sidechain complementarity | Yes, base pairing | No | No |
| Backbone self-complementarity | No: anionic, self-repulsive backbone | Yes: neutral, cohesive backbone | Yes: neutral, cohesive backbone |
| Complementary hydrogen bondingU | Unipolar, coplanar | Unipolar, coplanar | Bipolar, non-planar |
| Net hydrogen bond polarity | Large excess of acceptors over donors | Equivalent number of acceptors and donors | Excess of acceptors over donors |
| Selective self-interaction of hydrolyzed monomersU | No | No | No |
| Backbone linearity | Yes | Yes | Sometimes |
| Strand directionalityU | Yes, 5′–3′ | Yes, N to C | Yes, 1–4 |
| Secondary structureU | Helices, bulges, stem-loops, pseudoknots, etc | α-Helices, β-sheets and turns | Elongated fibers |
| Conformational constraintsU | “Rigid nucleotides,” planar bases | Planar peptide, allowed regions of ϕφ space | Conformational preferences within and between cyclic glucose |
| Self-destruct mechanism | RNA: Yes (2′ hydroxyl) | No | No |
| Required folding cofactors | Cations | None | None |
| Degradation by hydrolysisU | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Polymerized by | Protein | Ribozyme RNP complex | Protein |
| Polymerization is dependent on divalent cationsU | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Polymerization mechanismU | Condensation dehydration | Condensation dehydration | Condensation dehydration |
| Polymerization intermediatesU | Phosphorylated | Phosphorylated | Phosphorylated |
| Driver of polymerization motorU | Phosphate release | Phosphate release | Phosphate release |
| Retention of phosphate during polymerization | Yes | No | No |
U indicates universal property of all biopolymers
Fig. 1Net reactions for biopolymer formation by condensation dehydration and biopolymer degradation by hydrolysis. a Protein. b RNA. c Polysaccharide. All biopolymers are chiral and directional with distinctive ends. Chiral centers (stars, shown in polymers only) and strand directionalities (arrows) are indicated. Blue boxes indicate (in toto) the atoms involved in the synthesis/degradation reactions. (Color figure online)
Fig. 2Intermediates in the biosynthesis of a protein and b polyglucose
Fig. 3The self-complementarity of peptide linkages is the dominant molecular interaction in protein secondary structures and in folded protein. a Antiparallel β-sheet. b Parallel β-sheet. c α-Helix. d A globular protein showing α-helices (violet) and β-sheets (green). e An amyloid fibril showing dominance of β-sheets for any essentially amino acid sequence. Hydrogen bonding polarities are indicated by arrows. Each peptide linkage donates one hydrogen bond and accepts one hydrogen bond. (Color figure online)
Fig. 4The DNA duplex with sequence GATC in each strand is self-complementary, containing geometrically matched arrays of hydrogen bond donors and acceptors that link the two strands. On the left, the normals of the base pairs are within the plane of the page. On the right the normals of the base pairs are orthogonal to the page. Hydrogen bonds are indicated by dashed lines
Fig. 5In cellulose, matched arrays of hydrogen bond donors and acceptors stabilize the folding of (1–4) polymerized glucose into homogeneous fibers. The β-anomer but not the α-anomer enables complementary glucose–glucose interactions in the polymer
Fig. 6The impact of the 2′ hydroxyl group on polynucleotide reactivity and structure. a Reactivity. RNA holds a gun to its own head. The 2′ oxygen is a nucleophile that is poised to attack the adjacent phosphorous atom, cleaving the RNA backbone. b Folding. The 2′ hydroxyl group nucleates folding of complex structures by enabling hydrogen bonding between the backbone and bases, as demonstrated in the GNRA tetraloop. The 2′ hydroxyl of a guanine forms a hydrogen bond with the N7 of an adenine. In addition, the N1 and N2 of the guanine form a hydrogen bond with a phosphate oxygen of the backbone. c Complexity. RNA folds into elaborate three-dimensional structures. d DNA folds to long double helices. In panels a and b, hydrogen bonding groups that do not form hydrogen bonds are omitted for clarity