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The Relative Reactivity of Deoxyribose and Ribose: Did DNA Come Before RNA?If it is assumed that there was a precursor to the ribose-phosphate backbone of RNA in the preRNA world (such as peptide nucleic acid), then the entry of various sugars into the genetic material may be related to the stability and non-enzymatic reactivity of the aldose. The rate of decomposition of 2-deoxyribose has been determined to be 1/3 that of ribose. In addition we have measured the amount of free aldehyde by H-1 and C-13 NMR and find that it has approximately 0.15% free aldehyde compared to 0.05% for ribose at 25 C. This suggests that deoxyribose would be significantly more reactive with early bases in the absence of enzymes. This is confirmed by urazole and deoxyribose reacting to form the deoxynucleoside 45 times faster as 25 C than urazole reacts with ribose to form the Ribonucleoside. Urazole is a potential precursor of uracil and is a plausible prebiotic compound which reacts with aldoses to form nucleosides. Thus the non-enzymatic reactivity of deoxyribose would favor its early use over ribose until enzymes could change the relative reactivities. Most of the reasons that RNA is presumed to have come before DNA are extrapolations back from contemporary metabolism (e.g. the abundance of ribose based coenzymes, the biosynthesis of histidine, deoxyribonucleotides are synthesized from ribonucleotides, etc.). It is very difficult to reconstruct biochemical pathways much before the last common ancestor, and it is even more difficult to do more than guess at the biochemistry of very early self-replicating systems. Thus we believe that these reasons are not compelling and that the non-enzymatic chemistry may be more important than enzymatic pathways for constructing the earliest of biochemical pathways. While the RNA world has been discussed at great length, there has not been an exploration of the transition out of the RNA world. We have constructed many possible schemes of genetic takeover events from preRNA to modern DNA, RNA, protein system which could generate the RNA metabolic fossils we see today.
Document ID
19980084729
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Dworkin, Jason P.
(California Univ., San Diego La Jolla, CA United States)
Miller, Stanley L.
(California Univ., San Diego La Jolla, CA United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1995
Subject Category
Chemistry And Materials (General)
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.26:208003
NASA/CR-95-208003
Report Number: NAS 1.26:208003
Report Number: NASA/CR-95-208003
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAGw-2881
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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