Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4499213 Journal of Theoretical Biology 2006 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
The RNA world hypothesis requires a ribozyme that was an RNA-directed RNA polymerase (ribopolymerase). A model for this, based on the core of the large subunit of the ribosome, is developed further. The geometry of a potential active site for this ribopolymerase suggests that it contained a cavity (now occupied by the aminoacyl-tRNA) and that an amino acid binding in this might have “poisoned” the ribopolymerase by cross-reacting with the nucleoside triphosphate before polymerization could occur. Based on a similarity to the active site components of the class-I tRNA synthetase enzymes it is proposed that the amino acid could become attached to the nascent RNA transcript producing a variety of amino-acylated tRNA-like products. Using base-pairing interactions, it is suggested that some of these molecules might cross-link two ribopolymerases giving rise to a precursor of the modern ribosome with two subunits linked by tRNA. A hybrid dimer, half polymerase and half proto-ribosome, could account for mRNA translocation before the advent of protein elongation factors. Some implications for the genetic code are discussed.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences (General)
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