Department of Chemistry, Portland State University, PO Box 751, Portland, Oregon 97207, USA.
Nature. 2012 Nov 1;491(7422):72-7. doi: 10.1038/nature11549. Epub 2012 Oct 17.
The origins of life on Earth required the establishment of self-replicating chemical systems capable of maintaining and evolving biological information. In an RNA world, single self-replicating RNAs would have faced the extreme challenge of possessing a mutation rate low enough both to sustain their own information and to compete successfully against molecular parasites with limited evolvability. Thus theoretical analyses suggest that networks of interacting molecules were more likely to develop and sustain life-like behaviour. Here we show that mixtures of RNA fragments that self-assemble into self-replicating ribozymes spontaneously form cooperative catalytic cycles and networks. We find that a specific three-membered network has highly cooperative growth dynamics. When such cooperative networks are competed directly against selfish autocatalytic cycles, the former grow faster, indicating an intrinsic ability of RNA populations to evolve greater complexity through cooperation. We can observe the evolvability of networks through in vitro selection. Our experiments highlight the advantages of cooperative behaviour even at the molecular stages of nascent life.
地球上生命的起源需要建立能够自我复制的化学系统,这些系统能够维持和进化生物信息。在 RNA 世界中,单个自我复制的 RNA 将面临极端的挑战,需要拥有足够低的突变率,既能维持自身信息,又能成功抵御有限进化能力的分子寄生虫。因此,理论分析表明,相互作用的分子网络更有可能发展和维持类似生命的行为。在这里,我们表明,自我组装成自我复制核酶的 RNA 片段混合物会自发形成协同催化循环和网络。我们发现,一个特定的三成员网络具有高度协同的生长动力学。当这种协同网络直接与自私的自我催化循环竞争时,前者的生长速度更快,这表明 RNA 群体通过合作进化出更大复杂性的内在能力。我们可以通过体外选择观察网络的可进化性。我们的实验突出了合作行为的优势,即使在新生生命的分子阶段也是如此。