1 research outputs found
Cascade of Reduced Speed and Accuracy after Errors in Enzyme-Free Copying of Nucleic Acid Sequences
Nonenzymatic, template-directed synthesis of nucleic
acids is a
paradigm for self-replicating systems. The evolutionary dynamics of
such systems depend on several factors, including the mutation rates,
relative replication rates, and sequence characteristics of mutant
sequences. We measured the kinetics of correct and incorrect monomer
insertion downstream of a primer-template mismatch (mutation), using
a range of backbone structures (RNA, DNA, and LNA templates and RNA
and DNA primers) and two types of 5′-activated nucleotides
(oxyazabenzotriazolides and imidazolides, i.e., nucleoside 5′-phosphorimidazolides).
Our study indicated that for all systems studied, an initial mismatch
was likely to be followed by another error (54–75% of the time),
and extension after a single mismatch was generally 10–100
times slower than extension without errors. If the mismatch was followed
by a matched base pair, the extension rate recovered to nearly normal
levels. On the basis of these data, we simulated nucleic acid replication
in silico, which indicated that a primer suffering an initial error
would lag behind properly extended counterparts due to a cascade of
subsequent errors and kinetic stalling, with the typical mutational
event consisting of several consecutive errors. Our study also included
different sequence contexts, which suggest the presence of cooperativity
among monomers affecting both absolute rate (by up to 2 orders of
magnitude) and fidelity. The results suggest that molecular evolution
in enzyme-free replication systems would be characterized by large
“leaps” through sequence space rather than isolated
point mutations, perhaps enabling rapid exploration of diverse sequences.
The findings may also be useful for designing self-replicating systems
combining high fidelity with evolvability