New Study Hints at Spontaneous
Appearance of Primordial DNA
April 6, 2015,University
of Colorado , Boulder
Appearance of Primordial DNA
April 6, 2015,
The self-organization properties of DNA-like molecular
fragments four billion years ago may have guided their own growth into
repeating chemical chains long enough to act as a basis for primitive life,
says a new study by the University of Colorado Boulder and the University of
Milan.
While studies of ancient mineral formations contain evidence
for the evolution of bacteria from 3.5 to 3.8 billion years ago -- just half a
billion years after the stabilization of Earth's crust -- what might have
preceded the formation of such unicellular organisms is still a mystery. The
new findings suggest a novel scenario for the non-biological origins of nucleic
acids, which are the building blocks of living organisms, said CU-Boulder
physics Professor Noel Clark, a study co-author.
A paper on the subject led by Tommaso Bellini of the University of Milan was published in a recent issue of
Nature Communications. Other CU-Boulder co-authors of the study include
Professor David Walba, Research Associate Yougwooo Yi and Research Assistant
Gregory P. Smith. The study was funded by the Grant PRIN Program of the Italian
Ministries of Education, Universities and Research and by the U.S. National
Science Foundation.
The discovery in the 1980’s of the ability of RNA to
chemically alter its own structure by CU-Boulder Nobel laureate and
Distinguished Professor Tom Cech and his research team led to the development
of the concept of an “RNA world” in which primordial life was a pool of RNA
chains capable of synthesizing other chains from simpler molecules available in
the environment. While there now is consensus among origin-of-life researchers
that RNA chains are too specialized to have been created as a product of random
chemical reactions, the new findings suggest a viable alternative, said Clark .
The new research demonstrates that the spontaneous
self-assembly of DNA fragments just a few nanometers in length into ordered
liquid crystal phases has the ability to drive the formation of chemical bonds
that connect together short DNA chains to form long ones, without the aid of
biological mechanisms. Liquid crystals are a form of matter that has properties
between those of conventional liquids and those of a solid crystal -- a liquid
crystal may flow like a liquid, for example, but its molecules may be oriented
more like a crystal.
“Our observations are suggestive of what may have happened
on the early Earth when the first DNA-like molecular fragments appeared,” said Clark .
For several years the research group has been exploring the
hypothesis that the way in which DNA emerged in the early Earth lies in its
structural properties and its ability to self-organize. In the pre-RNA world,
the spontaneous self-assembly of fragments of nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) may
have acted as a template for their chemical joining into polymers, which are
substances composed of a large number of repeating units.
“The new findings show that in the presence of appropriate
chemical conditions, the spontaneous self assembly of small DNA fragments into
stacks of short duplexes greatly favors their binding into longer polymers,
thereby providing a pre-RNA route to the RNA world,” said Clark .
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