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Emergence of a "Cyclosome" in a Primitive Network Capable of Building "Infinite" Proteins. | LitMetric

Emergence of a "Cyclosome" in a Primitive Network Capable of Building "Infinite" Proteins.

Life (Basel)

Laboratory of Microbiology Signals and Microenvironment, Université de Rouen, 76821 Mont-Saint-Aignan CEDEX, France.

Published: June 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The AL (ALpha) sequence is proposed as an RNA sequence that may have been crucial in the origin of life by aiding the formation of the first peptide assemblies, which included a variety of proteins.
  • This sequence is characterized as the smallest RNA ring that can adopt an evolutionarily stable hairpin structure, enabling it to withstand environmental changes while representing all codon synonym classes.
  • Evidence suggests long subsequences of the AL resemble those in modern tRNAs and 5S rRNAs, showing a correlation with current genomes, particularly in ribosome-related proteins, potentially explaining the presence of universal genetic sequences.

Article Abstract

We argue for the existence of an RNA sequence, called the AL (for ALpha) sequence, which may have played a role at the origin of life; this role entailed the AL sequence helping generate the first peptide assemblies via a primitive network. These peptide assemblies included "infinite" proteins. The AL sequence was constructed on an economy principle as the smallest RNA ring having one representative of each codon's synonymy class and capable of adopting a non-functional but nevertheless evolutionarily stable hairpin form that resisted denaturation due to environmental changes in pH, hydration, temperature, etc. Long subsequences from the AL ring resemble sequences from tRNAs and 5S rRNAs of numerous species like the proteobacterium, . Pentameric subsequences from the AL are present more frequently than expected in current genomes, in particular, in genes encoding some of the proteins associated with ribosomes like tRNA synthetases. Such relics may help explain the existence of universal sequences like exon/intron frontier regions, Shine-Dalgarno sequence (present in bacterial and archaeal mRNAs), CRISPR and mitochondrial loop sequences.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6617141PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life9020051DOI Listing

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