Biondi Elisa, Branciamore Sergio, Fusi Luca, Gago Selma, Gallori Enzo
Department of Animal Biology and Genetics, University of Florence, Florence, Italy.
Gene. 2007 Mar 1;389(1):10-8. doi: 10.1016/j.gene.2006.09.002. Epub 2006 Sep 27.
The hypothesized RNA-based world would have required the presence of a protected environment in which RNA, or an RNA-like molecule, could originate and express its biological activity. Recent studies have indicated that RNA molecules adsorbed/bound on clay minerals are able to persist in the presence of degrading agents, to interact with surrounding molecules, and to transmit the information contained in their nucleotide sequences. In this study, we assessed the ability of RNA molecules with catalytic activity to perform a specific reaction in a mineral environment. For this purpose, we investigated the self-cleavage reaction of the hammerhead ribozyme of the Avocado Sun Blotch Viroid (ASBVd), both in the monomeric and in dimeric forms. The monomeric transcript was tightly bound on the clay mineral montmorillonite to form a stable complex, while the behaviour of the dimeric transcript was studied in the presence of the clay particles in the reaction mixture. The results indicated that the hammerhead ribozyme was still active when the monomeric transcript was adsorbed on the clay surface, even though its efficiency was reduced to about 20% of that in solution. Moreover, the self-cleavage of clay-adsorbed molecule was significantly enhanced ( approximately four times) by the presence of the 5' reaction product. The self-cleavage reaction of the dimeric transcript in the presence of montmorillonite indicated that the mineral particles protected the RNA molecules against aspecific degradation and increased the rate of cleavage kinetics by about one order of magnitude. These findings corroborate the hypothesis that clay-rich environments would have been a good habitat in which RNA or RNA-like molecules could originate, accumulate and undergo Darwinian evolutionary processes, leading to the first living cells on Earth.
基于RNA的假设世界需要一个受保护的环境,使RNA或类似RNA的分子能够在其中产生并表达其生物活性。最近的研究表明,吸附/结合在粘土矿物上的RNA分子能够在降解剂存在的情况下持续存在,与周围分子相互作用,并传递其核苷酸序列中包含的信息。在本研究中,我们评估了具有催化活性的RNA分子在矿物环境中进行特定反应的能力。为此,我们研究了鳄梨日斑类病毒(ASBVd)锤头状核酶的单体和二聚体形式的自我切割反应。单体转录本紧密结合在粘土矿物蒙脱石上形成稳定的复合物,而二聚体转录本的行为则在反应混合物中存在粘土颗粒的情况下进行研究。结果表明,当单体转录本吸附在粘土表面时,锤头状核酶仍然具有活性,尽管其效率降至溶液中效率的约20%。此外,5'反应产物的存在显著增强了粘土吸附分子的自我切割(约四倍)。蒙脱石存在下二聚体转录本的自我切割反应表明,矿物颗粒保护RNA分子免受非特异性降解,并将切割动力学速率提高了约一个数量级。这些发现证实了一个假设,即富含粘土的环境可能是一个良好的栖息地,RNA或类似RNA的分子可以在其中产生、积累并经历达尔文进化过程,从而产生地球上的第一批活细胞。