Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1952344 Biochimie 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

The results of a detailed bioinformatic search for ribonucleotidyl coenzyme biosynthetic sequences in DNA- and RNA viral genomes are presented. No RNA viral genome sequence available as of April 2011 appears to encode for sequences involved in coenzyme biosynthesis. In both single- and double-stranded DNA viruses a diverse array of coenzyme biosynthetic genes has been identified, but none of the viral genomes examined here encodes for a complete pathway. Although our conclusions may be constrained by the unexplored diversity of viral genomes and the biases in the construction of viral genome databases, our results do not support the possibility that RNA viruses are direct holdovers from an ancient RNA/protein world. Extrapolation of our results to evolutionary epochs prior to the emergence of DNA genomes suggest that during those early stages living entities may have depended on discontinuous genetic systems consisting of multiple small-size RNA sequences.

► RNA viruses do not encode for sequences involved in the synthesis of coenzymes. ► DNA viruses have coenzyme biosynthetic genes but no complete coenzyme pathways. ► Viral enzymes involved in biosynthesis of coenzymes come from their hosts. ► Evidence suggests that RNA viruses are not direct holdovers from an RNA/protein world.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Biochemistry
Authors
, , , , ,