What the earliest forms of life on Earth may have looked like
July 18th, 2008 - 3:33 pm ICT by ANIWashington, July 18 (ANI): Yale University researchers believe that the earliest forms of life on Earth were single strands of nucleotides, which performed some of the complicated cellular functions proteins are known to carry out at present.
They say that their surmise is based on the finding that bacterial cells use ancient forms of RNA to swim, morph into new forms, and even become dangerously virulentall without initial involvement of DNA.
Ronald Breaker, senior author of the study, reckons that such cellular functions would have been common on Earth some four billion years ago, well before DNA existed.
He says that proteins are not always necessary to spur such cellular changes in bacteria.
“How could RNA trigger changes in ancient cells without all the proteins present in modern cells? Well, in this case, no proteins, no problem,” says Breaker, who is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
The researcher says that bacteria have a large RNA structure called riboswitch that can independently “decide”” which genes in the cell to activate, an ability once thought to rest exclusively with proteins.
Breaker also highlights the fact that almost 20 classes of riboswitches have been found in nature in the last six years.
“We predicted that there would be an ancient ”RNA city” out there in the jungle, and we went out and found it,”” he says.
He and his colleagues believe that billions of years ago, single strands of nucleotides that comprise RNA were the first forms of life and carried out some of the complicated cellular functions now done by proteins.
The riboswitches are highly conserved in bacteria, illustrating their importance and ancient ancestry, he says.
According to him, understanding how these RNA mechanisms work may lead to medical treatments for bacterial infections like cholera. (ANI)
- Study sheds light on RNA 'on/off switches' - Feb 14, 2011
- Bacteria more likely to adopt 'loner' genes than well-connected ones - Mar 17, 2011
- Boffins uncover mysterious workings of cholera bacteria - Jul 29, 2010
- Long-standing mystery of protein 'quality control' mechanism solved - Sep 13, 2010
- Chemical mechanism behind bugs' antibiotic resistance identified - Apr 29, 2011
- Deadly tool in Salmonella's bag of tricks identified - Feb 04, 2011
- Study of how certain genes are activated yields surprising discovery - Dec 06, 2010
- Rogue DNA could trip the heart - Apr 26, 2012
- This is it - women's immunity gene! - Sep 28, 2011
- Scientists create RNA molecule that may shed light on origin of Earthly life - Feb 23, 2010
- Some bacteria 'go to sleep to hide from antibiotics' - Apr 26, 2011
- Vitamin B12 imaged in action for first time - Mar 27, 2012
- Marine bacteria digest plastic - Mar 29, 2011
- Gene that causes Parkinson's disease identified - Jul 29, 2010
- NASA Announces Existence Of Bacteria Thriving On Arsenic - Dec 03, 2010
Tags: bacteria, bacterial cells, bacterial infections, cellular changes, cellular functions, cholera, howard hughes, howard hughes medical, howard hughes medical institute, hughes medical institute, initial involvement, life on earth, medical treatments, morph, nucleotides, proteins, rna structure, strands, university researchers, yale university