4 research outputs found
Experimental and Computational Evidence for a Loose Transition State in Phosphoroimidazolide Hydrolysis
Phosphoroimidazolides
play a critical role in several enzymatic
phosphoryl transfer reactions and have been studied extensively as
activated monomers for nonenzymatic nucleic acid replication, but
the detailed mechanisms of these phosphoryl transfer reactions remain
elusive. Some aspects of the mechanism can be deduced by studying
the hydrolysis reaction, a simpler system that is amenable to a thorough
mechanistic treatment. Here we characterize the transition state of
phosphoroÂimidÂazolide hydrolysis by kinetic isotope effect
(KIE) and linear free energy relationship (LFER) measurements, and
theoretical calculations. The KIE and LFER observations are best explained
by calculated loose transition structures with extensive scissile
bond cleavage. These three-dimensional models of the transition state
provide the basis for future mechanistic investigations of phosphoroÂimidÂazolide
reactions
Downstream Oligonucleotides Strongly Enhance the Affinity of GMP to RNA PrimerâTemplate Complexes
Origins of life hypotheses
often invoke a transitional phase of
nonenzymatic template-directed RNA replication prior to the emergence
of ribozyme-catalyzed copying of genetic information. Here, using
NMR and ITC, we interrogate the binding affinity of guanosine 5â˛-monophosphate
(GMP) for primerâtemplate complexes when either another GMP,
or a helper oligonucleotide, can bind downstream. Binding of GMP to
a primerâtemplate complex cannot be significantly enhanced
by the possibility of downstream monomer binding, because the affinity
of the downstream monomer is weaker than that of the first monomer.
Strikingly, GMP binding affinity can be enhanced by ca. 2 orders of
magnitude when a helper oligonucleotide is stably bound downstream
of the monomer binding site. We compare these thermodynamic parameters
to those previously reported for T7 RNA polymerase-mediated replication
to help address questions of binding affinity in related nonenzymatic
processes
Copying of Mixed-Sequence RNA Templates inside Model Protocells
The chemical replication
of RNA inside fatty acid vesicles is a
plausible step in the emergence of cellular life. On the primitive
Earth, simple protocells with the ability to import nucleotides and
short oligomers from their environment could potentially have replicated
and retained larger genomic RNA oligonucleotides within a spatially
defined compartment. We have previously shown that short 5â˛-phosphoroimidazolide-activated
âhelperâ RNA oligomers enable the nonenzymatic copying
of mixed-sequence templates in solution, using 5â˛-phosphoroimidazolide-activated
mononucleotides. Here, we report that citrate-chelated Mg<sup>2+</sup>, a catalyst of nonenzymatic primer extension, enhances fatty acid
membrane permeability to such short RNA oligomers up to the size of
tetramers, without disrupting vesicle membranes. In addition, selective
permeability of short, but not long, oligomers can be further enhanced
by elevating the temperature. The ability to increase the permeability
of fatty acid membranes to short oligonucleotides allows for the nonenzymatic
copying of RNA templates containing all four nucleotides inside vesicles,
bringing us one step closer to the goal of building a protocell capable
of Darwinian evolution
Enhanced Nonenzymatic RNA Copying with 2âAminoimidazole Activated Nucleotides
Achieving
efficient nonenzymatic replication of RNA is an important
step toward the synthesis of self-replicating protocells that may
mimic early forms of life. Despite recent progress, the nonenzymatic
copying of templates containing mixed sequences remains slow and inefficient.
Here we demonstrate that activating nucleotides with 2-aminoimidazole
results in superior reaction kinetics and improved yields of primer
extension reaction products. This new leaving group significantly
accelerates monomer addition as well as trimer-assisted RNA primer
extension, allowing efficient copying of a variety of short RNA templates
with mixed sequences