The high affinity of Ag+ for DNA bases has enabled creation of short oligonucleotide-encapsulated Ag nanoclusters without formation of large nanoparticles. Time-dependent formation of cluster sizes ranging from Ag1 to Ag4/oligonucleotide were observed with strong, characteristic electronic transitions between 400 and 600 nm. The slow nanocluster formation kinetics enables observation of specific aqueous nanocluster absorptions that evolve over a period of 12 h. Induced circular dichroism bands confirm that the nanoclusters are associated with the chiral ss-DNA template. Fluorescence, absorption, mass, and NMR spectra all indicate that multiple species are present, but that their creation is both nucleotide- and time-dependent.
We have studied the competition between Na+ and K+ for coordination by G quartets using the oligonucleotide d(G3T4G3) as a model system. d(G3T4G3) forms a dimeric foldback structure containing three G quartets in the presence of either NaCl or KCl. Proton chemical shifts, which are particular to the species of coordinated ion, have been used to monitor the conversion between the sodium and potassium forms under equilibrium conditions. Analysis of titration experiments indicates that at least two K+ are coordinated by the three quartets of the dimeric molecule, and perfect fits of the data are obtained for two Na+ being displaced by two K+. Our results also indicate that the conversion of [d(G3T4G3)]2 from the sodium to the potassium form is associated with a net free energy change (delta G degrees) of -1.7 +/- 0.15 kcal/mol. It has long been suggested that the greater thermal stability of DNA quadruplex structures in the presence of K+ is primarily a result of the optimal fit of this ion in the coordination sites formed by G quartets. However, a consideration of the relatively small change in free energy associated with the conversion from the sodium to the potassium form and the relatively large difference between the free energy of hydration for Na+ and K+ indicates that this cannot be correct. Rather, the preferred coordination of K+ over Na+ is actually driven by the greater energetic cost of Na+ dehydration with respect to K+ dehydration.
Although it is generally accepted that amino acids were present on the prebiotic Earth, the mechanism by which α-amino acids were condensed into polypeptides before the emergence of enzymes remains unsolved. Here, we demonstrate a prebiotically plausible mechanism for peptide (amide) bond formation that is enabled by α-hydroxy acids, which were likely present along with amino acids on the early Earth. Together, α-hydroxy acids and α-amino acids form depsipeptides—oligomers with a combination of ester and amide linkages—in model prebiotic reactions that are driven by wet–cool/dry–hot cycles. Through a combination of ester–amide bond exchange and ester bond hydrolysis, depsipeptides are enriched with amino acids over time. These results support a long-standing hypothesis that peptides might have arisen from ester-based precursors.
We present a molecular-level model for the origin and evolution of the translation system, using a 3D comparative method. In this model, the ribosome evolved by accretion, recursively adding expansion segments, iteratively growing, subsuming, and freezing the rRNA. Functions of expansion segments in the ancestral ribosome are assigned by correspondence with their functions in the extant ribosome. The model explains the evolution of the large ribosomal subunit, the small ribosomal subunit, tRNA, and mRNA. Prokaryotic ribosomes evolved in six phases, sequentially acquiring capabilities for RNA folding, catalysis, subunit association, correlated evolution, decoding, energy-driven translocation, and surface proteinization. Two additional phases exclusive to eukaryotes led to tentacle-like rRNA expansions. In this model, ribosomal proteinization was a driving force for the broad adoption of proteins in other biological processes. The exit tunnel was clearly a central theme of all phases of ribosomal evolution and was continuously extended and rigidified. In the primitive noncoding ribosome, proto-mRNA and the small ribosomal subunit acted as cofactors, positioning the activated ends of tRNAs within the peptidyl transferase center. This association linked the evolution of the large and small ribosomal subunits, protomRNA, and tRNA.RNA evolution | translation | origin of life | A-minor interactions T he ribosome retains interpretable molecular records of a world of primordial molecules (1) from around 4 billion years ago (2-9). The records are maintained in rRNA secondary and 3D structures, which are fully conserved throughout the tree of life, and in rRNA sequences, which are more variable (SI Appendix, Fig. S1). Here we use information within ribosomes from each major branch of the tree of life to reconstruct much of the emergence of the universal translational machinery. Large Ribosomal Subunit EvolutionPreviously, we reported a 3D comparative method that revealed a molecular level chronology of the evolution of the large ribosomal subunit (LSU) rRNA (10). Insertion fingerprints are evident when comparing 3D structures of LSU rRNAs of various sizes from various species. These insertion fingerprints mark sites where rRNA expands, recording growth steps on a molecular level.Within the common core of the LSU rRNA, insertion fingerprints were used to identify ancient growth sites. We showed that insertion fingerprints provide a roadmap from the first steps in the formation of the peptidyl transferase center (PTC) (10) located in the ancient heart of the LSU (2-6), culminating in the common core.Small Ribosomal Subunit, LSU, tRNA, and mRNA Evolution Here, using the 3D comparative method, we establish a comprehensive and coherent model for the evolution of the entire ribosome. This model covers the LSU rRNA, small ribosomal subunit (SSU) rRNA, tRNA, and mRNA. The evolution of each of these components is reconciled at the molecular level to a common chronology. This evolutionary model, which we call the "accretion model," ...
DNA toroids produced by the condensation of phage DNA with hexammine cobalt (III) have been investigated by cryoelectron microscopy. Image resolution obtained by this technique has allowed unprecedented views of DNA packing within toroidal condensates. Toroids oriented coplanar with the microscope image plane exhibit circular fringes with a repeat spacing of 2.4 nm. For some toroids these fringes are observed around almost the entire circumference of the toroid. However, for most toroids welldefined fringes are limited to less than one-third of the total toroid circumference. Some toroids oriented perpendicular to the image plane reveal DNA polymers organized in a hexagonal close-packed lattice; however, for other toroids alternative packing arrangements are observed. To aid interpretation of electron micrographs, three-dimensional model toroids were generated with perfect hexagonal DNA packing throughout, as well as more physically realistic models that contain crossover points between DNA loops. Simulated transmission electron microscopy images of these model toroids in different orientations faithfully reproduce most features observed in cryoelectron micrographs of actual toroids.DNA ͉ gene delivery ͉ packaging D NA in living cells is highly condensed and rarely assumes the extended state that it does when free in solution. In both bacteria and eukaryotic cells the active regulation of DNA condensation is known to be an integral part of the cell cycle (1, 2). In sperm cells and viruses, where DNA transcription and replication are inactive, DNA can be packaged at densities that approach the limits of molecular compaction (3, 4). In most vertebrate sperm cells DNA is condensed by arginine-rich proteins into thousands of toroidal structures, each measuring Ϸ100 nm in outside diameter (5). The DNA of some bacteriophages also is packaged into a single toroid, or spool, with similar dimensions (6-8). Thus, the toroid represents a fundamental morphology selected by nature for the high-density packaging of DNA. In addition to the relevance of DNA toroids to cell biology and virology, DNA condensation is presently of great interest for the development of gene therapies, because controlling DNA condensation is widely appreciated as a key step in the improvement of artificial gene delivery systems (9-12).Twenty-five years ago it was discovered that the polyamine spermidine can cause the condensation of DNA into toroidal structures in vitro with dimensions similar to those expelled from bacteriophage capsids (13). Numerous subsequent studies demonstrated that toroidal DNA condensates are produced by a wide range of multivalent cations [e.g., Co(NH 3 ) 6 3ϩ , polylysine, histone H1] and even by monovalent cations in the presence of dehydrating or crowding agents (5, 14-18). Toroidal DNA condensates also have attracted the attention of theoreticians who have shown toroid formation to be a general phenomenon resulting from the self-association (or collapse) of a semiflexible polymer in solution (19)(20)(21)(22)(23). DNA tor...
The origins and evolution of the ribosome, 3-4 billion years ago, remain imprinted in the biochemistry of extant life and in the structure of the ribosome. Processes of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) expansion can be "observed" by comparing 3D rRNA structures of bacteria (small), yeast (medium), and metazoans (large). rRNA size correlates well with species complexity. Differences in ribosomes across species reveal that rRNA expansion segments have been added to rRNAs without perturbing the preexisting core. Here we show that rRNA growth occurs by a limited number of processes that include inserting a branch helix onto a preexisting trunk helix and elongation of a helix. rRNA expansions can leave distinctive atomic resolution fingerprints, which we call "insertion fingerprints." Observation of insertion fingerprints in the ribosomal common core allows identification of probable ancestral expansion segments. Conceptually reversing these expansions allows extrapolation backward in time to generate models of primordial ribosomes. The approach presented here provides insight to the structure of pre-last universal common ancestor rRNAs and the subsequent expansions that shaped the peptidyl transferase center and the conserved core. We infer distinct phases of ribosomal evolution through which ribosomal particles evolve, acquiring coding and translocation, and extending and elaborating the exit tunnel.RNA evolution | C value | origin of life | translation | phylogeny T he translation system, one of life's universal processes, synthesizes all coded protein in living systems. Our understanding of translation has advanced over the last decade and a half with the explosion in sequencing data and by the determination of 3D structures (1-4). X-ray crystallography and cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM) have provided atomic resolution structures of ribosomes from all three domains of life. Eukaryotic ribosomal structures are now available from protists (5), fungi (6), plants (7), insects, and humans (8). Here we describe an atomic level model of the evolution of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) from the large ribosomal subunit (LSU). Our evolutionary model is grounded in patterns of rRNA growth in relatively recent ribosomal expansions, for which there is an extensive, atomicresolution record.The common core LSU rRNA (9, 10), which is approximated here by the rRNA of Escherichia coli, is conserved over the entire phylogenetic tree, in sequence, and especially in secondary structure (11) and 3D structure (12). By contrast, the surface regions and the sizes of ribosomes are variable (13,14). Most of the size variability is found in eukaryotic LSUs (Fig. 1). The integrated rRNA size in the LSU follows the trend Bacteria ≤ Archaea < Eukarya. The added rRNA in eukaryotes interacts with eukaryotic-specific proteins (5, 8, 9) (SI Appendix, Fig. S1 and Dataset S1).Bacterial and archaeal LSU rRNAs are composed entirely of the common core, with only subtle deviations from it. By contrast, eukaryotic LSU rRNAs are expanded beyond the common core. Sacccharomyce...
The DNA sequence d(G(4)T(4)G(4)) [Oxy-1.5] consists of 1.5 units of the repeat in telomeres of Oxytricha nova and has been shown by NMR and X-ray crystallographic analysis to form a dimeric quadruplex structure with four guanine-quartets. However, the structure reported in the X-ray study has a fundamentally different conformation and folding topology compared to the solution structure. In order to elucidate the possible role of different counterions in this discrepancy and to investigate the conformational effects and dynamics of ion binding to G-quadruplex DNA, we compare results from further experiments using a variety of counterions, namely K(+), Na(+)and NH(4)(+). A detailed structure determination of Oxy-1.5 in solution in the presence of K(+)shows the same folding topology as previously reported with the same molecule in the presence of Na(+). Both conformations are symmetric dimeric quadruplexes with T(4)loops which span the diagonal of the end quartets. The stack of quartets shows only small differences in the presence of K(+)versus Na(+)counterions, but the T(4)loops adopt notably distinguishable conformations. Dynamic NMR analysis of the spectra of Oxy-1.5 in mixed Na(+)/K(+)solution reveals that there are at least three K(+)binding sites. Additional experiments in the presence of NH(4)(+)reveal the same topology and loop conformation as in the K(+)form and allow the direct localization of three central ions in the stack of quartets and further show that there are no specific NH(4)(+)binding sites in the T(4)loop. The location of bound NH(4)(+)with respect to the expected coordination sites for Na(+)binding provides a rationale for the difference observed for the structure of the T(4)loop in the Na(+)form, with respect to that observed for the K(+)and NH(4)(+)forms.
Toroidal DNA condensates have attracted the attention of biophysicists, biochemists, and polymer physicists for more than thirty years. In the biological community, the quest to understand DNA toroid formation has been motivated by its relevance to gene packing in certain viruses and by the potential use of DNA toroids in artificial gene delivery (e.g., gene therapy). In the physical sciences, DNA toroids are appreciated as a superb model system for studying particle formation by the collapse of a semiflexible, polyelectrolyte polymer. This review focuses on experimental studies from the past few years that have significantly increased our understanding of DNA toroid structure and the mechanism of their formation. Highlights include structural studies that show the DNA strands within toroids to be packed in an ideal hexagonal lattice, and also in regions with a nonhexagonal lattice that are required by the topological constraints associated with winding DNA into a toroid. Recent studies of DNA toroid formation have also revealed that toroid size limits result from a complex interplay between kinetic and thermodynamic factors that govern both toroid nucleation and growth. The work discussed in this review indicates that it will ultimately be possible to obtain substantial control over DNA toroid dimensions.
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