Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/2348
Title: Characterization of RNA-Like Oligomers from Lipid-Assisted Nonenzymatic Synthesis: Implications for Origin of Informational Molecules on Early Earth
Authors: MUNGI, CHAITANYA
RAJAMANI, SUDHA
Dept. of Biology
Keywords: Dehydration-rehydration cycles
Prebiotic chemistry
lipid-assisted polymerization
Abasic sites
Sugar-phosphate backbones
2015
Issue Date: Jan-2015
Publisher: MDPI
Citation: Life, 5(1), 65-84.
Abstract: Prebiotic polymerization had to be a nonenzymatic, chemically driven process. These processes would have been particularly favored in scenarios which push reaction regimes far from equilibrium. Dehydration-rehydration (DH-RH) cycles are one such regime thought to have been prevalent on prebiotic Earth in niches like volcanic geothermal pools. The present study defines the optimum DH-RH reaction conditions for lipid-assisted polymerization of nucleotides. The resultant products were characterized to understand their chemical makeup. Primarily, our study demonstrates that the resultant RNA-like oligomers have abasic sites, which means these oligomers lack information-carrying capability because of losing most of their bases during the reaction process. This results from low pH and high temperature conditions, which, importantly, also allows the formation of sugar-phosphate oligomers when ribose 5'-monophosphates are used as the starting monomers instead. Formation of such oligomers would have permitted sampling of a large variety of bases on a preformed polymer backbone, resulting in “prebiotic phosphodiester polymers” prior to the emergence of modern RNA-like molecules. This suggests that primitive genetic polymers could have utilized bases that conferred greater N-glycosyl bond stability, a feature crucial for information propagation in low pH and high temperature regimes of early Earth
URI: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/2348
https://doi.org/10.3390/life5010065
ISSN: 2075-1729
Appears in Collections:JOURNAL ARTICLES

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