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Press Release
New Study by Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute Suggests an Answer
for One of the Oldest Questions in Biology
La Jolla, CA, February 15, 2001 -- Scientists at The Skaggs Institute for
Chemical Biology, a part of The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI), have published
a paper in the current issue of Nature that suggests a possible answer
to how one of the early steps necessary for the origins of life arose.
Principal Investigator M. Reza Ghadiri, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry at
TSRI, has created a biological polymer that can discriminate between two types
of building blocks, taking those that are similar and building a copy of itself
with them.
The research article, "A Chiroselective Peptide Replicator," is authored
by Alan Saghatelian, Yohei Yokobayashi, Kathy Soltani, and M. Reza Ghadiri.
Information transfer is one of the most fundamental requirements for life.
Human DNA, for instance, lives in cell nuclei, where it makes RNA and protein
products that carry out the work of the cell, (and in the big picture) our bodies.
Part of this work is replicating and dividing the DNA so that the cell can split
into two new daughter cells. Life is defined by these replication processes.
What is also known is that all the DNA, RNA, and protein molecules in our
bodies are all homochiral. That is, the L-amino acids from which proteins are
made and the D-riboses from which DNA and RNA are made are all chiral molecules.
They come in two non-superimposable mirror image forms, like your right and left
hand. Our bodies can only use the L-form of amino acids (left-handed) and the
D-form of ribose molecules (right-handed).
Since only the correct forms of these building blocks of life can be used,
a natural question arises. How did the very first biological molecules assemble
out of a presumed mixture of right and left- handed building blocks?
To answer this, Ghadiri and his colleagues asked if a molecule that was correctly
composed of all right or all left-handed components could replicate itself. They
used peptides--short proteins of 32 amino acids--that naturally fold into a long
helix and stick to another similar peptide, somewhat like the double barrels
of a shotgun. They mixed right and left-handed versions of these peptides together
with a mixture of their right and left-hand components.
For the "template" peptides to replicate, the correctly-handed components
in the mixture would have to stick to the correct location on the peptides and
then link up, forming exact copies of the template molecules, and this is exactly
what they observed. The left-handed templates made more left-handed copies and
the right-handed templates made right-handed copies from the mixed components.
Not only did the results show that the peptides favored the synthesis of
correct duplicates, but the duplicates auto-catalyzed the reaction, speeding
it up. They further discovered that if they added "mutant" peptide templates
with a single incorrectly handed molecule, these would not make more mutant templates.
They would instead correct the mistake and catalyze the formation of new molecules
with the correct composition.
"That is astonishing," says Ghadiri. "Based on [our] understanding, polypeptides
can self- replicate, form complex networks, error correct, form mutual systems,
they have all sorts of emergent properties, and they can now do homochiral amplification."
The proof that a peptide system can self-replicate chiralselectively is strong
evidence that such peptide chemistry could play an important role in the gestation
of life on earth and elsewhere in the universe.
The research was funded (in part) by the NASA Astrobiology Institute, a national
research consortium whose Central Office is located at NASA's Ames Research Center
in Mt. View, CA The NAI, led by Director Baruch Blumberg, M.D, Ph.D. (Nobel laureate,
'76), comprises 11 lead TEAMS and has international Affiliate and Associate Members.
For more information contact:
Keith McKeown
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.8134
Fax: 858.784.8118
kmckeown@scripps.edu
Kathleen Burton
NASA Ames Research Center
Tel: 650.604.1731
kburton@mail.arc.nasa.gov
Copyright © 2001 TSRI.
All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of TSRI is prohibited.
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