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Amino Acid‐Specific, Ribonucleotide‐Promoted Peptide Formation in the Absence of Enzymes
Author(s) -
Griesser Helmut,
Bechthold Maren,
Tremmel Peter,
Kervio Eric,
Richert Clemens
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
angewandte chemie international edition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.831
H-Index - 550
eISSN - 1521-3773
pISSN - 1433-7851
DOI - 10.1002/anie.201610651
Subject(s) - ribonucleotide , phosphodiester bond , amino acid , chemistry , nucleic acid , biochemistry , peptide , pyrophosphate , tyrosine , rna , enzyme , nucleotide , proline , nucleobase , stereochemistry , dna , gene
Nucleic acids and polypeptides are at the heart of life. It is interesting to ask whether the monomers of these biopolymers possess intrinsic reactivity that favors oligomerization in the absence of enzymes. We have recently observed that covalently linked peptido RNA chains form when mixtures of monomers react in salt‐rich condensation buffer. Here, we report the results of a screen of the 20 proteinogenic amino acids and four ribonucleotides. None of the amino acids prevent phosphodiester formation, so all of them are compatible with genetic encoding through RNA chain growth. A reactivity landscape was found, in which peptide formation strongly depends on the structure of the amino acid, but less on the nucleobase. For example, proline gives ribonucleotide‐bound peptides most readily, tyrosine favors pyrophosphate and phosphodiester formation, and histidine gives phosphorimidazolides as dominant products. When proline and aspartic acid were allowed to compete for incorporation, only proline was found at the N‐terminus of peptido chains. The reactivity described here links two fundamental classes of biomolecules through reactions that occur without enzymes, but with amino acid specificity.

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