RNA Back and Forth: Looking through Ribozyme and Viroid Motifs (original) (raw)

Natural and unnatural ribozymes: back to the primordial RNA world

Research in microbiology, 2009

We review natural and in vitro selected ribozymes, for which combined studies could provide us with both insight into the functions performed by ancient RNA molecules in a primitive RNA world and a hypothesis about evolutionary steps that led to the contemporary world.

From ancient to modern RNA world: a metabolic story

2005

The RNA world theory suggests that modern life arose from molecular ancestors in which RNA molecules both stored genetic information and catalyzed chemical reactions. This theory is largely supported by the importance of RNA molecules in essential contemporary cellular processes: RNA is involved in the decoding of genetic information, DNA replication, and chromosome-end maintenance; it mediates interference to defend cells against molecular parasites, and an increasing number of non-coding RNAs have recently been discovered that are involved in various biological processes. In addition, individual ribonucleotides and their coenzyme derivatives are highly involved in central metabolism. Moreover, the discovery of catalytic RNAs strongly reinforced the RNA world hypothesis. Seven naturally occuring classes of ribozymes have been identified yet, including the four classes of small self-cleaving RNAs. The latter are found on plant pathogenics RNA genomes, and are essentially involved in...

The roads to and from the RNA world

Journal of Theoretical Biology, 2003

The historical existence of the RNA world, in which early life used RNA for both genetic information and catalytic ability, is widely accepted. However, there has been little discussion of whether protein synthesis arose before DNA or what preceded the RNA world (i.e. the pre-RNA world). We outline arguments of what route life may have taken out of the RNA world: whether DNA or protein followed. Metabolic arguments favor the possibility that RNA genomes preceded the use of DNA as the informational macromolecule. However, the opposite can also be argued based on the enhanced stability, reactivity, and solubility of 2-deoxyribose as compared to ribose. The possibility that DNA may have come before RNA is discussed, although it is a less parsimonious explanation than DNA following RNA.

Setting the stage: the history, chemistry, and geobiology behind RNA

Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology, 2012

No community-accepted scientific methods are available today to guide studies on what role RNA played in the origin and early evolution of life on Earth. Further, a definition-theory for life is needed to develop hypotheses relating to the "RNA First" model for the origin of life. Four approaches are currently at various stages of development of such a definition-theory to guide these studies. These are (a) paleogenetics, in which inferences about the structure of past life are drawn from the structure of present life; (b) prebiotic chemistry, in which hypotheses with experimental support are sought that get RNA from organic and inorganic species possibly present on early Earth; (c) exploration, hoping to encounter life independent of terran life, which might contain RNA; and (d) synthetic biology, in which laboratories attempt to reproduce biological behavior with unnatural chemical systems.

The RNA World: Piecing together the historical development of a hypothesis

Mètode Revista de difusió de la investigació, 2015

The concept of an RNA world is a hypothesis firmly rooted in empirical data and is part of a long and complex scientific perspective that goes back more than fifty years to the discovery of the central role RNA and ribonucleotides play in protein synthesis and biochemical reactions took place. As the understanding of RNA biology progressed, several independent proposals of protein-free primordial life forms were suggested. Although this possibility was strongly reinforced with the discovery of ribozymes, there are many definitions of the RNA world, including several contradictory ones. One could say that it was an early, perhaps primordial, stage during which RNA molecules played a much more conspicuous role in heredity and metabolism and, particularly, in the origin and early evolution of protein biosynthesis. The overwhelming evidence for the catalytic, regulatory, and structural properties of RNA molecules, combined with their ubiquity in cellular processes, can only be explained with the proposal that they played a key role in early evolution and perhaps in the origin of life itself.

Recent findings in the modern RNA world

International microbiology : the official journal of the Spanish Society for Microbiology, 2001

It is assumed that modern life forms arose from a molecular ancestor in which RNA molecules both stored genetic information and catalyzed biochemical reactions. In modern cells, these functions are carried out, respectively, by DNA and proteins, but diverse cellular RNAs are also involved in key cellular functions. In this paper, we review the cellular RNAs that are ubiquitous and/or that perform essential biological functions, and we discuss the evolutionary relationships of such RNAs with a prebiotic RNA world. This unexpected biological diversity of cellular RNAs and the crucial functions they perform in cellular metabolism demonstrate the complexity of an RNA-driven metabolism in an ancient RNA world and in modern life. Cellular RNAs are involved in translation (tRNA and rRNA) but also in ribosome maturation (snoRNA) and more generally in RNA processing (snRNA and snoRNA), replication (telomerase RNA), editing, protein translocation (SRP RNA), cellular transport (vRNA) and trans...

The dynamics of the RNA world: insights and challenges

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2015

The RNA world hypothesis of the origin of life, in which RNA emerged as both enzyme and information carrier, is receiving solid experimental support. The prebiotic synthesis of biomolecules, the catalytic aid offered by mineral surfaces, and the vast enzymatic repertoire of ribozymes are only pieces of the origin of life puzzle; the full picture can only emerge if the pieces fit together by either following from one another or coexisting with each other. Here, we review the theory of the origin, maintenance, and enhancement of the RNA world as an evolving population of dynamical systems. The dynamical view of the origin of life allows us to pinpoint the missing and the not fitting pieces: (1) How can the first self-replicating ribozyme emerge in the absence of template-directed information replication? (2) How can nucleotide replicators avoid competitive exclusion despite utilizing the very same resources (nucleobases)? (3) How can the information catastrophe be avoided? (4) How can...

RNA Relics and Origin of Life

International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 2009

A number of small RNA sequences, located in different non-coding sequences and highly preserved across the tree of life, have been suggested to be molecular fossils, of ancient (and possibly primordial) origin. On the other hand, recent years have revealed the existence of ubiquitous roles for small RNA sequences in modern organisms, in functions ranging from cell regulation to antiviral activity. We propose that a single thread can be followed from the beginning of life in RNA structures selected only for stability reasons through the RNA relics and up to the current coevolution of RNA sequences; such an understanding would shed light both on the history and on the present development of the RNA machinery and interactions. After presenting the evidence (by comparing their sequences) that points toward a common thread, we discuss a scenario of genome coevolution (with emphasis on viral infectious processes) and finally propose a plan for the reevaluation of the stereochemical theory of the genetic code; we claim that it may still be relevant, and not only for understanding the origin of life, but also for a comprehensive picture of regulation in present-day cells.

The “Strong” RNA World Hypothesis: Fifty Years Old

Astrobiology, 2013

This year marks the 50 th anniversary of a proposal by Alex Rich that RNA, as a single biopolymer acting in two capacities, might have supported both genetics and catalysis at the origin of life. We review here both published and previously unreported experimental data that provide new perspectives on this old proposal. The new data include evidence that, in the presence of borate, small amounts of carbohydrates can fix large amounts of formaldehyde that are expected in an environment rich in carbon dioxide. Further, we consider other species, including arsenate, arsenite, phosphite, and germanate, that might replace phosphate as linkers in genetic biopolymers. While linkages involving these oxyanions are judged to be too unstable to support genetics on Earth, we consider the possibility that they might do so in colder semi-aqueous environments more exotic than those found on Earth, where cosolvents such as ammonia might prevent freezing at temperatures well below 273 K. These include the ammonia-water environments that are possibly present at low temperatures beneath the surface of Titan, Saturn's largest moon.

Relics from the RNA World

An RNA world is widely accepted as a probable stage in the early evolution of life. Two implications are that proteins have gradually replaced RNA as the main biological catalysts and that RNA has not taken on any major de novo catalytic function after the evolution of protein synthesis, that is, there is an essentially irreversible series of steps RNA --> RNP --> protein. This transition, as expected from a consideration of catalytic perfection, is essentially complete for reactions when the substrates are small molecules. Based on these principles we derive criteria for identifying RNAs in modern organisms that are relics from the RNA world and then examine the function and phylogenetic distribution of RNA for such remnants of the RNA world. This allows an estimate of the minimum complexity of the last ribo-organism-the stage just preceding the advent of genetically encoded protein synthesis. Despite the constraints placed on its size by a low fidelity of replication (the Eigen limit), we conclude that the genome of this organism reached a considerable level of complexity that included several RNA-processing steps. It would include a large protoribosome with many smaller RNAs involved in its assembly, pre-tRNAs and tRNA processing, an ability for recombination of RNA, some RNA editing, an ability to copy to the end of each RNA strand, and some transport functions. It is harder to recognize specific metabolic reactions that must have existed but synthetic and bio-energetic functions would be necessary. Overall, this requires that such an organism maintained a multiple copy, double-stranded linear RNA genome capable of recombination and splicing. The genome was most likely fragmented, allowing each "chromosome" to be replicated with minimum error, that is, within the Eigen limit. The model as developed serves as an outgroup to root the tree of life and is an alternative to using sequence data for inferring properties of the earliest cells.