2 research outputs found
Nonenzymatic Polymerization into Long Linear RNA Templated by Liquid Crystal Self-Assembly
Self-synthesizing materials, in which
supramolecular structuring
enhances the formation of new molecules that participate to the process,
represent an intriguing notion to account for the first appearance
of biomolecules in an abiotic Earth. We present here a study of the
abiotic formation of interchain phosphodiester bonds in solutions
of short RNA oligomers in various states of supramolecular arrangement
and their reaction kinetics. We found a spectrum of conditions in
which RNA oligomers self-assemble and phase separate into highly concentrated
ordered fluid liquid crystal (LC) microdomains. We show that such
supramolecular state provides a template guiding their ligation into
hundred-bases long chains. The quantitative analysis presented here
demonstrates that nucleic acid LC boosts the rate of end-to-end ligation
and suppresses the formation of the otherwise dominant cyclic oligomers.
These results strengthen the concept of supramolecular ordering as
an efficient pathway toward the emergence of the RNA World in the
primordial Earth
