5 results match your criteria: "NASA Center for the Origins of Life[Affiliation]"
J Mol Evol
April 2022
NASA Center for the Origins of Life, Atlanta, GA, 30332-0400, USA.
Evolution works by adaptation and exaptation. At an organismal level, exaptation and adaptation are seen in the formation of organelles and the advent of multicellularity. At the sub-organismal level, molecular systems such as proteins and RNAs readily undergo adaptation and exaptation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochemistry exhibits an intense dependence on metals. Here we show that during dry-down reactions, zinc and a few other transition metals increase the yield of long histidine-containing depsipeptides, which contain both ester and amide linkages. Our results suggest that interactions of proto-peptides with metal ions influenced early chemical evolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Evol
February 2021
NASA Center for the Origins of Life, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Water, the most abundant compound on the surface of the Earth and probably in the universe, is the medium of biology, but is much more than that. Water is the most frequent actor in the chemistry of metabolism. Our quantitation here reveals that water accounts for 99.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
June 2020
NSF/NASA Center for Chemical Evolution, Atlanta, GA, USA.
The close synergy between peptides and nucleic acids in current biology is suggestive of a functional co-evolution between the two polymers. Here we show that cationic proto-peptides (depsipeptides and polyesters), either produced as mixtures from plausibly prebiotic dry-down reactions or synthetically prepared in pure form, can engage in direct interactions with RNA resulting in mutual stabilization. Cationic proto-peptides significantly increase the thermal stability of folded RNA structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2019
National Science Foundation (NSF)-National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Center for Chemical Evolution, Atlanta, GA 30332;
Numerous long-standing questions in origins-of-life research center on the history of biopolymers. For example, how and why did nature select the polypeptide backbone and proteinaceous side chains? Depsipeptides, containing both ester and amide linkages, have been proposed as ancestors of polypeptides. In this paper, we investigate cationic depsipeptides that form under mild dry-down reactions.
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