Achieving multiple cycles of RNA replication within a model protocell would be a critical step toward demonstrating a path from prebiotic chemistry to cellular biology. Any model for early life based on an “RNA world” must account for RNA strand cleavage and hydrolysis, which would degrade primitive genetic information and lead to an accumulation of truncated, phosphate-terminated strands. We show here that cleavage of the phosphodiester backbone is not an end point for RNA replication. Instead, 3′-phosphate-terminated RNA strands can participate in template-directed copying reactions with activated ribonucleotide monomers. These reactions form a pyrophosphate linkage, the stability of which we have characterized in the context of RNA copying chemistry. The presence of free magnesium cations results in cleavage of the pyrophosphate bond within minutes. However, we found that the pyrophosphate bond is relatively stable within an RNA duplex and in the presence of chelated magnesium. We show that, under these conditions, pyrophosphate-linked RNA can act as a template for the polymerization of ribonucleotides into canonical 3′–5′ phosphodiester-linked RNA. We suggest that primer extension of 3′-phosphate-terminated RNA followed by template-directed copying represents a plausible nonenzymatic pathway for the salvage and recovery of genetic information following strand cleavage.
A series of 180 vinblastine 20’ amides were prepared in three steps from commercially available starting materials, systematically exploring a typically inaccessible site in the molecule enlisting a powerful functionalization strategy. Clear structure–activity relationships and a structural model were developed in the studies which provided many such 20’ amides that exhibit substantial and some even remarkable enhancements in potency, many that exhibit further improvements in activity against a Pgp overexpressing resistant cancer cell line, and an important subset of the vinblastine analogs that display little or no differential in activity against a matched pair of vinblastine sensitive and resistant (Pgp overexpressing) cell lines. The improvements in potency directly correlated with target tubulin binding affinity and the reduction in differential functional activity against the sensitive and Pgp overexpressing resistant cell lines was found to correlate directly with an impact on Pgp-derived efflux.
Aminoacylated tRNAs are the substrates for ribosomal protein synthesis in all branches of life, implying an ancient origin for aminoacylation chemistry. In the 1970s, Orgel and colleagues reported potentially prebiotic routes to aminoacylated nucleotides and their RNA-templated condensation to form amino acid-bridged dinucleotides. However, it is unclear whether such reactions would have aided or impeded nonenzymatic RNA replication. Determining whether aminoacylated RNAs could have been advantageous in evolution prior to the emergence of protein synthesis remains a key challenge. We therefore tested the ability of aminoacylated RNA to participate in both templated primer extension and ligation reactions. We find that at low magnesium concentrations that favor fatty acid-based protocells, these reactions proceed orders of magnitude more rapidly than when initiated from the cis-diol of unmodified RNA. We further demonstrate that amino acid-bridged RNAs can act as templates in a subsequent round of copying. Our results suggest that aminoacylation facilitated non-enzymatic RNA replication, thus outlining a potentially primordial functional link between aminoacylation chemistry and RNA replication.
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