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Artificial enzyme able to synthesize RNA in Whitehead lab

In some of the strongest evidence yet to support the RNA world hypothesis -- an era in early evolution when life forms depended on RNA -- scientists at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research have created an RNA catalyst, or a ribozyme, that possesses some of the key properties needed to sustain life in such a world.

The new ribozyme, generated by Associate Professor of Biology David Bartel and his colleagues at Whitehead, can carry out a remarkably complicated and challenging reaction, especially given that it was not isolated from nature but created from scratch in the laboratory. This ribozyme can use information from a template RNA to make a third, new RNA. It can do so with more than 95 percent accuracy, and most importantly, its ability is not restricted by the length or the exact sequence of letters in the original template. The ribozyme can extend an RNA strand, adding up to 14 nucleotides, or letters, to make up more than a complete turn of an RNA helix.

These results, described in the May 18 issue of Science, suggest that RNA could have had the ability to replicate itself and sustain life in early evolution, before the advent of DNA and proteins. The findings will ultimately help evolutionary biologists address questions about how life began on earth more than three billion years ago.

Until almost two decades ago, many researchers thought that RNA was nothing more than a molecular interpreter that helps translate DNA codes into proteins. Then scientists discovered that not all enzymes were proteins; some were made of RNA. Over the past decade, they've developed techniques for producing new ribozymes in the lab, and a series of studies by the Bartel lab has been lending credence to the notion of an RNA world.

Still, none of the ribozymes generated by the Bartel lab or others in the field possessed the sophisticated properties needed to accurately replicate RNA. The finding reported in Science narrows that gap.

"Creating a complementary strand of RNA is a challenging enzymatic reaction because it requires several things to happen at the same time. The reaction must be accurate in incorporating nucleotides based on the template strand, general enough that any template can be copied, and efficient enough to add on a large number of nucleotides," said Wendy Johnston, first author on the paper and research associate in the Bartel lab.

THEORIES ON LIFE'S ORIGINS

Theories about the origins of life have long intrigued scientists and lay people alike. "A fundamental question about the origin of life is what class of molecules gave rise to some of the earliest life forms?" said Professor Bartel.

For years, scientists debated this question, some arguing that RNA molecules were the progenitors and others arguing in favor of proteins. "It was a classic chicken-and-egg argument. RNA, like DNA, has the genetic information necessary to reproduce but needs proteins to catalyze the reaction. Conversely, proteins can catalyze reactions but cannot reproduce without the information supplied by RNA," he said.

The discovery in 1982 of ribozymes bolstered the notion that RNA came before protein, but more challenges lay ahead for evolutionary biologists before they could espouse the RNA worldview. For one, there are only eight known ribozymes in nature -- nowhere near enough to sustain the range of reactions in an RNA world. Further, compared to protein enzymes, ribozymes seemed slow and inefficient as catalysts. So scientists set out to make artificial ribozymes that were more versatile and efficient than the natural ones. If they could create such ribozymes in the lab, it would suggest that natural ones could have existed during the RNA era but have become extinct since.

NEW RIBOZYMES

Designing new enzymes is a difficult task, but what researchers can do is make thousands of trillions of RNA molecules with the hope that one or a few of them can catalyze the appropriate reactions. To identify the few that have the desired properties, researchers subject the huge population of ribozymes to a test-tube evolution -- a process of selection and evolution that mimics these processes in nature.

"During the selection process, we look for RNAs that can change themselves in a special way. We can then separate them from RNA that don't change themselves," said Dr. Bartel.

In 1993, he and Jack Szostak at Harvard University found 65 novel ribozymes from a search of more than 1,000 trillion RNAs. "When we subjected these ribozymes to a test-tube evolution, we found descendants that were 100 times more efficient," Professor Bartel said.

Since then, his lab has been using the test-tube evolution method to gather further evidence for the RNA world. Three years ago, for example, the lab found a ribozyme that could carry out the type of reaction needed to synthesize its own building blocks.

In this study, the Bartel lab scientists took the approach again of making 1000 trillion random RNAs go through test-tube evolution to find those that could catalyze RNA formation. After successive rounds of testing, the lab isolated a ribozyme that didn't depend on a particular template sequence, but could build a complementary strand of RNA using information from any general RNA template. In fact, the ribozyme isn't hindered by longer RNA templates and works nearly as well with longer sequences as with shorter ones.

This suggests that if efficiency is increased, it may be possible to replicate the entire ribozyme. The ribozyme also accurately matches bases -- A to U, and C to G -- to the RNA template more than 95 percent of the time, better than any previously isolated ribozyme.

"We will never be able to prove the existence of the RNA world because we can't go back in time -- but we can examine the basic properties of RNA and see if these are compatible within the RNA world scenario," Professor Bartel said.

A version of this article appeared in MIT Tech Talk on June 13, 2001.

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