Shapiro R
Department of Chemistry, New York University 10003, USA.
Orig Life Evol Biosph. 1995 Jun;25(1-3):83-98. doi: 10.1007/BF01581575.
Adenine plays an essential role in replication in all known living systems today, and is prominent in many other aspects of biochemistry. It occurs among the products of oligomerization of HCN. These circumstances have stimulated the idea that adenine was a component in a replication system that was present at the start of life. Such replicators have included not only RNA, but also a number of simpler RNA-like alternatives which utilize a simpler backbone. Despite these encouraging indicators, a consideration of the chemical properties of adenine reveals reasons that disfavor its participation in such a role. These properties include the following: (1) Adenine synthesis requires HCN concentrations of at least 0.01 M. Such concentrations would be expected only in unique circumstances on the early Earth. Adenine yields are low in prebiotic simulations, and if a subsequent high-temperature hydrolysis step is omitted, the reported yield does not represent adenine itself, but 8-substituted adenines and other derivatives. (2) Adenine is susceptible to hydrolysis (the half life for deamination at 37 degrees C, pH 7, is about 80 years), and to reaction with a variety of simple electrophiles, forming a multiplicity of products. Its accumulation would not be expected over a geological time scale, and its regioselective incorporation into a replicator appears implausible. (3) The adenine-uracil interaction, which involves two hydrogen bonds (rather than three, as in guanine-cytosine pairing) is weak and nonspecific. Pairing of adenine with many other partners has been observed with monomers, synthetic oligonucleotides and in RNA. The hydrogen-bonding properties of adenine appear inadequate for it to function in any specific recognition scheme under the chaotic conditions of a prebiotic soup. New and fundamental discoveries in the chemistry of adenine would be needed to reverse this perception. An alternative and attractive possibility is that some other replicator preceeded RNA (or RNA-like substances) in the origin of life.
腺嘌呤在当今所有已知的生命系统的复制过程中都起着至关重要的作用,并且在生物化学的许多其他方面也很突出。它存在于HCN的低聚物产物之中。这些情况激发了这样一种观点,即腺嘌呤是生命起源时就存在的复制系统的一个组成部分。这样的复制因子不仅包括RNA,还包括许多更简单的类RNA替代物,它们使用更简单的骨架。尽管有这些令人鼓舞的迹象,但对腺嘌呤化学性质的考虑揭示了一些不利于其参与这种作用的原因。这些性质包括:(1)腺嘌呤的合成需要至少0.01M的HCN浓度。这样的浓度只有在早期地球的特殊情况下才会出现。在生命起源前的模拟实验中,腺嘌呤的产量很低,而且如果省略随后的高温水解步骤,所报道的产量并不代表腺嘌呤本身,而是8-取代腺嘌呤和其他衍生物。(2)腺嘌呤易水解(在37℃、pH值为7时脱氨的半衰期约为80年),并且易与多种简单的亲电试剂反应,形成多种产物。在地质时间尺度上,预计它不会积累,并且其区域选择性掺入复制因子似乎不太可能。(3)腺嘌呤与尿嘧啶的相互作用涉及两个氢键(而不是像鸟嘌呤与胞嘧啶配对那样的三个氢键),这种相互作用较弱且不具有特异性。在单体、合成寡核苷酸和RNA中都观察到腺嘌呤与许多其他配对伙伴的配对。在生命起源前的原始汤的混沌条件下,腺嘌呤的氢键性质似乎不足以使其在任何特定的识别机制中发挥作用。需要在腺嘌呤化学方面有新的和根本性的发现来改变这种看法。另一种有吸引力的可能性是,在生命起源过程中,某些其他复制因子先于RNA(或类RNA物质)出现。