58 research outputs found

    A Model for the Evolution of Nucleotide Polymerase Directionality

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    Background: In all known living organisms, every enzyme that synthesizes nucleic acid polymers does so by adding nucleotide 59-triphosphates to the 39-hydroxyl group of the growing chain. This results in the well known 5’?3’ directionality of all DNA and RNA Polymerases. The lack of any alternative mechanism, e.g. addition in a 3’?5 ’ direction, may indicate a very early founder effect in the evolution of life, or it may be the result of a selective pressure against such an alternative. Methodology/Principal Findings: In an attempt to determine whether the lack of an alternative polymerase directionality is the result of a founder effect or evolutionary selection, we have constructed a basic model of early polymerase evolution. This model is informed by the essential chemical properties of the nucleotide polymerization reaction. With this model, we are able to simulate the growth of organisms with polymerases that synthesize either 5’?3 ’ or 3’?5 ’ in isolation or in competition with each other. Conclusions/Significance: We have found that a competition between organisms with 5’?3 ’ polymerases and 3’?5’ polymerases only results in a evolutionarily stable strategy under certain conditions. Furthermore, we have found that mutations lead to a much clearer delineation between conditions that lead to a stable coexistence of these populations and conditions which ultimately lead to success for the 5’?3 ’ form. In addition to presenting a plausible explanation for th

    Thermodynamic Basis for the Emergence of Genomes during Prebiotic Evolution

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    The RNA world hypothesis views modern organisms as descendants of RNA molecules. The earliest RNA molecules must have been random sequences, from which the first genomes that coded for polymerase ribozymes emerged. The quasispecies theory by Eigen predicts the existence of an error threshold limiting genomic stability during such transitions, but does not address the spontaneity of changes. Following a recent theoretical approach, we applied the quasispecies theory combined with kinetic/thermodynamic descriptions of RNA replication to analyze the collective behavior of RNA replicators based on known experimental kinetics data. We find that, with increasing fidelity (relative rate of base-extension for Watson-Crick versus mismatched base pairs), replications without enzymes, with ribozymes, and with protein-based polymerases are above, near, and below a critical point, respectively. The prebiotic evolution therefore must have crossed this critical region. Over large regions of the phase diagram, fitness increases with increasing fidelity, biasing random drifts in sequence space toward ‘crystallization.’ This region encloses the experimental nonenzymatic fidelity value, favoring evolutions toward polymerase sequences with ever higher fidelity, despite error rates above the error catastrophe threshold. Our work shows that experimentally characterized kinetics and thermodynamics of RNA replication allow us to determine the physicochemical conditions required for the spontaneous crystallization of biological information. Our findings also suggest that among many potential oligomers capable of templated replication, RNAs may have evolved to form prebiotic genomes due to the value of their nonenzymatic fidelity

    The Nanoscience Paradigm: “Size Matters!”

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    The essential feature of nanomaterials is that their physical and chemical properties are size dependent, making it possible to engineer the material properties not only by defining its chemical composition, but also by tailoring the size and shape of the nanostructures, and the way in which individual building blocks are assembled. This chapter addresses the origin of the size dependence of the properties of nanomaterials, which can be traced to two fundamental nanoscale effects: (a) the increase in the surface/volume ratio with decreasing size, and (b) spatial confinement effects. Furthermore, the definition and classification of nanomaterials is introduced, and the techniques used to fabricate and study them are briefly discussed, with emphasis on nanoparticles of inorganic materials

    Variation in PAH-related DNA adduct levels among non-smokers:the role of multiple genetic polymorphisms and nucleotide excision repair phenotype

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    Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) likely play a role in many cancers even in never-smokers. We tried to find a model to explain the relationship between variation in PAH-related DNA adduct levels among people with similar exposures, multiple genetic polymorphisms in genes related to metabolic and repair pathways, and nucleotide excision repair (NER) capacity. In 111 randomly selected female never-smokers from the Golestan Cohort Study in Iran, we evaluated 21 SNPs in 14 genes related to xenobiotic metabolism and 12 SNPs in eight DNA repair genes. NER capacity was evaluated by a modified comet assay, and aromatic DNA adduct levels were measured in blood by32P-postlabeling. Multivariable regression models were compared by Akaike's information criterion (AIC). Aromatic DNA adduct levels ranged between 1.7 and 18.6 per 108 nucleotides (mean: 5.8 ± 3.1). DNA adduct level was significantly lower in homozygotes for NAT2 slow alleles and ERCC5 non-risk-allele genotype, and was higher in the MPO homozygote risk-allele genotype. The sum of risk alleles in these genes significantly correlated with the log-adduct level (r = 0.4, p < 0.001). Compared with the environmental model, adding Phase I SNPs and NER capacity provided the best fit, and could explain 17% more of the variation in adduct levels. NER capacity was affected by polymorphisms in the MTHFR and ERCC1 genes. Female non-smokers in this population had PAH-related DNA adduct levels three to four times higher than smokers and occupationally-exposed groups in previous studies, with large inter-individual variation which could best be explained by a combination of Phase I genes and NER capacity. Copyright © 2012 UICC
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