| Literature DB >> 32590933 |
Hemachander Subramanian1,2,3, Joel Brown1,2, Robert Gatenby4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We hypothesize prebiotic evolution of self-replicating macro-molecules (Alberts, Molecular biology of the cell, 2015; Orgel, Crit Rev Biochem Mol Biol 39:99-123, 2004; Hud, Nat Commun 9:5171) favoured the constituent nucleotides and biophysical properties observed in the RNA and DNA of modern organisms. Assumed initial conditions are a shallow tide pool, containing a racemic mix of diverse nucleotide monomers (Barks et al., Chembiochem 11:1240-1243, 2010; Krishnamurthy, Nat Commun 9:5175, 2018; Hirao, Curr Opin Chem Biol 10:622-627), subject to day/night thermal fluctuations (Piccirilli et al., Nature 343:33-37, 1990). Self-replication, like Polymerase Chain Reactions, followed as higher daytime thermal energy "melted" inter-strand hydrogen bonds causing strand separation while solar UV radiation increased prebiotic nucleobase formation (Szathmary, Proc Biol Sci 245:91-99, 1991; Materese et al., Astrobiology 17:761-770, 2017; Bera et al., Astrobiology 17:771-785, 2017). Lower night energies allowed free monomers to form hydrogen bonds with their template counterparts leading to daughter strand synthesis (Hirao, Biotechniques 40:711, 2006).Entities:
Keywords: Autocatalytic self-replicators; DNA; Origins of life; Origins of natural selection; Prebiotic evolution; RNA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32590933 PMCID: PMC7318430 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-020-01641-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.436
Fig. 1a The energy diagrams above the polymers show the heights of the kinetic barriers for bond formation/dissociation in various regions. Dark- vertical bars are hydrogen bonds with high kinetic barrier, while lighter bars denote bonds with lower kinetic barriers. The balls-and-sticks diagram of polymer growth illustrates the fact that asymmetric cooperativity enables faster strand growth by lowering kinetic barrier for bond formation to the right. Asymmetric kinetic influence of a hydrogen bond on adjacent monomers (raising the barrier of the left bond and lowering it for the right) optimizes strand elongation as well as increases the duration of monomer bonding to the template strand to increase the probability of covalent bond formation. b With symmetric kinetic influence, hydrogen bonds that are away from the growth front (second bond from left) have lower kinetic barriers. Thus, monomers are drawn away from growth front, resulting in lower growth rate. This makes symmetric replicators evolutionarily inferior (From Ref [26], with permission)
Fig. 2(top) An illustration of bidirectional self-replication. Symmetric kinetic influence helps in bidirectional strand construction and requires left-right symmetric monomers. (Bottom) Structural instantiation of asymmetric cooperativity requires left-right asymmetric polymers to distinguish between left and right. Asymmetric monomers instantiate asymmetric cooperativity and thus simultaneously satisfy the two conflicting requirements of fast monomer acquisition and their retention for successful self-replication. This leads to the evolutionary superiority of unidirectional self-replicators
Fig. 3a Parallel strand orientation of the duplex DNA freezes the mode of asymmetric cooperativity along the entire length of the strand, reducing the kinetic barrier of the hydrogen bond in the right adjacent monomer and decreasing that of the left adjacent monomer. Both the strands of the duplex DNA act in concert to incorporate asymmetric cooperativity. b Anti-parallel orientation with homo-molecular base-pairing destroys the asymmetric cooperativity because the two identical strands oppose each other’s asymmetric cooperativity mode due to their opposing orientations. c Reinstating asymmetric cooperativity requires the breaking the symmetry of homo-molecular base-pairing. Due to differences in the strengths of asymmetric cooperativity from the two strands made of different kinds of monomers, a complete cancellation of asymmetric cooperativity is avoided, leaving a resultant, comparatively weaker sequence-dependent asymmetric cooperativity. d Thus, heteromolecular base-pairing and anti-parallel strand orientation allows for sequence-dependent asymmetric cooperativity mode, leading to simultaneous replication of multiple disjoint segments independently, increasing the rate of replication. Simultaneous replication is possible because multiple segments can be unzipped independently, due to their different asymmetric cooperativity modes. e With just two monomers, information storage and unzipping kinetics are coupled, resulting in the former adversely affecting the latter. f Introduction of another pair of monomers decouples the two. Storing information does not adversely affect unzipping kinetics (g). h Low kinetic barriers in the middle of the double strand allows for rapid unzipping of the double strand during replication initiation, thus serving as origin of replication