Division of Physiological Chemistry I, Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Genomics Proteomics Bioinformatics. 2011 Apr;9(1-2):15-20. doi: 10.1016/S1672-0229(11)60003-X.
Stable isotopes of most important biological elements, such as C, H, N and O, affect living organisms. In rapidly growing species, deuterium and to a lesser extent other heavy isotopes reduce the growth rate. At least for deuterium it is known that its depletion also negatively impacts the speed of biological processes. As a rule, living organisms "resist" changes in their isotopic environment, preferring natural isotopic abundances. This preference could be due to evolutionary optimization; an additional effect could be due to the presence of the "isotopic resonance". The isotopic resonance phenomenon has been linked to the choice of earliest amino acids, and thus affected the evolution of genetic code. To test the isotopic resonance hypothesis, literature data were analyzed against quantitative and qualitative predictions of the hypothesis. Four studies provided five independent datasets, each in very good quantitative agreement with the predictions. Thus, the isotopic resonance hypothesis is no longer simply plausible; it can now be deemed likely. Additional testing is needed, however, before full acceptance of this hypothesis.
大多数重要生物元素的稳定同位素,如 C、H、N 和 O,都会影响生物体。在快速生长的物种中,氘和其他重同位素在一定程度上会降低生长速度。至少对于氘来说,人们已经知道它的耗尽也会对生物过程的速度产生负面影响。通常情况下,生物体“抵制”其同位素环境的变化,更倾向于自然同位素丰度。这种偏好可能是由于进化优化;另一个额外的影响可能是由于“同位素共振”的存在。同位素共振现象与最早的氨基酸选择有关,从而影响了遗传密码的进化。为了检验同位素共振假说,对文献数据进行了分析,以检验该假说的定量和定性预测。四项研究提供了五个独立的数据集,每个数据集都与预测非常吻合。因此,同位素共振假说不再仅仅是合理的;现在可以认为它很有可能成立。然而,在完全接受这一假说之前,还需要进行更多的测试。