4 research outputs found

    Experimental and Computational Evidence for a Loose Transition State in Phosphoroimidazolide Hydrolysis

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    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 phosphoro­imid­azolide 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 phosphoro­imid­azolide reactions

    Bidirectional Direct Sequencing of Noncanonical RNA by Two-Dimensional Analysis of Mass Chromatograms

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    Mass spectrometry (MS) is a powerful technique for characterizing noncanonical nucleobases and other chemical modifications in small RNAs, yielding rich chemical information that is complementary to high-throughput indirect sequencing. However, mass spectra are often prohibitively complex when fragment ions are analyzed following either solution phase hydrolysis or gas phase fragmentation. For all but the simplest cases, ions arising from multiple fragmentation events, alternative fragmentation pathways, and diverse salt adducts frequently obscure desired single-cut fragment ions. Here we show that it is possible to take advantage of predictable regularities in liquid chromatographic (LC) separation of optimized RNA digests to greatly simplify the interpretation of complex MS data. A two-dimensional analysis of extracted compound chromatograms permits straightforward and robust de novo sequencing, using a novel Monte Carlo algorithm that automatically generates bidirectional paired-end reads, pinpointing the position of modified nucleotides in a sequence. We demonstrate that these advances permit routine LC–MS sequencing of RNAs containing noncanonical nucleotides, and we furthermore examine the applicability of this approach to the study of oligonucleotides containing artificial modifications as well as those commonly observed in post-transcriptionally modified RNAs

    <i>N</i>‑Carboxyanhydride-Mediated Fatty Acylation of Amino Acids and Peptides for Functionalization of Protocell Membranes

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    Early protocells are likely to have arisen from the self-assembly of RNA, peptide, and lipid molecules that were generated and concentrated within geologically favorable environments on the early Earth. The reactivity of these components in a prebiotic environment that supplied sources of chemical energy could have produced additional species with properties favorable to the emergence of protocells. The geochemically plausible activation of amino acids by carbonyl sulfide has been shown to generate short peptides via the formation of cyclic amino acid <i>N</i>-carboxyanhydrides (NCAs). Here, we show that the polymerization of valine-NCA in the presence of fatty acids yields acylated amino acids and peptides via a mixed anhydride intermediate. Notably, <i>N</i><sup>α</sup>-oleoylarginine, a product of the reaction between arginine and oleic acid in the presence of valine-NCA, partitions spontaneously into vesicle membranes and mediates the association of RNA with the vesicles. Our results suggest a potential mechanism by which activated amino acids could diversify the chemical functionality of fatty acid membranes and colocalize RNA with vesicles during the formation of early protocells

    Enhanced Nonenzymatic RNA Copying with 2‑Aminoimidazole Activated Nucleotides

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    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
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