‘Grand Challenges’ offer ways to discover flaws in existing theory without first needing to guess what those flaws are. Our grand challenge here is to reproduce the Darwinism of terran biology, but ...on molecular platforms different from standard DNA. Access to Darwinism distinguishes the living from the non-living state. However, theory suggests that any biopolymer able to support Darwinism must (a) be able to form Schrödinger's `aperiodic crystal’, where different molecular components pack into a single crystal lattice, and (b) have a polyelectrolyte backbone. In 1953, the descriptive biology of Watson and Crick suggested DNA met Schrödinger’s criertion, forming a linear crystal with geometrically similar building blocks supported on a polyelectrolye backbone. At the center of genetics were nucleobase pairs that fit into that crystal lattice by having both size complementarity and hydrogen bonding complementarity to enforce a constant geometry. This review covers experiments that show that by adhering to these two structural rules, the aperiodic crystal structure is maintained in DNA having 6 (or more) components. Further, this molecular system is shown to support Darwinism. Together with a deeper understanding of the role played in crystal formation by the poly-charged backbone and the intervening scaffolding, these results define how we might search for Darwinism, and therefore life, on Mars, Europa, Enceladus, and other watery lagoons in our Solar System.
We report DNA- and RNA-like systems built from eight nucleotide "letters" (hence the name "hachimoji") that form four orthogonal pairs. These synthetic systems meet the structural requirements needed ...to support Darwinian evolution, including a polyelectrolyte backbone, predictable thermodynamic stability, and stereoregular building blocks that fit a Schrödinger aperiodic crystal. Measured thermodynamic parameters predict the stability of hachimoji duplexes, allowing hachimoji DNA to increase the information density of natural terran DNA. Three crystal structures show that the synthetic building blocks do not perturb the aperiodic crystal seen in the DNA double helix. Hachimoji DNA was then transcribed to give hachimoji RNA in the form of a functioning fluorescent hachimoji aptamer. These results expand the scope of molecular structures that might support life, including life throughout the cosmos.
Alternative Watson-Crick Synthetic Genetic Systems Benner, Steven A; Karalkar, Nilesh B; Hoshika, Shuichi ...
Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology,
2016-Nov-01, 2016-11-00, 20161101, Letnik:
8, Številka:
11
Journal Article
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In its "grand challenge" format in chemistry, "synthesis" as an activity sets out a goal that is substantially beyond current theoretical and technological capabilities. In pursuit of this goal, ...scientists are forced across uncharted territory, where they must answer unscripted questions and solve unscripted problems, creating new theories and new technologies in ways that would not be created by hypothesis-directed research. Thus, synthesis drives discovery and paradigm changes in ways that analysis cannot. Described here are the products that have arisen so far through the pursuit of one grand challenge in synthetic biology: Recreate the genetics, catalysis, evolution, and adaptation that we value in life, but using genetic and catalytic biopolymers different from those that have been delivered to us by natural history on Earth. The outcomes in technology include new diagnostic tools that have helped personalize the care of hundreds of thousands of patients worldwide. In science, the effort has generated a fundamentally different view of DNA, RNA, and how they work.
Recently reported "displaceable probe" loop amplification (DP-LAMP) architecture has shown to amplify viral RNA from SARS-CoV-2 with little sample processing. The architecture allows signals ...indicating the presence of target nucleic acids to be spatially separated, and independent in sequence, from the complicated concatemer that LAMP processes create as part of their amplification process. This makes DP-LAMP an attractive molecular strategy to integrate with trap and sampling innovations to detect RNA from arboviruses carried by mosquitoes in the field. These innovations include (a) development of organically produced carbon dioxide with ethylene carbonate as a bait deployable in mosquito trap, avoiding the need for dry ice, propane tanks, or inorganic carbonates and (b) a process that induces mosquitoes to lay virus-infected saliva on a quaternary ammonium-functionalized paper (Q-paper) matrix, where (c) the matrix (i) inactivates the deposited viruses, (ii) releases their RNA, and (iii) captures viral RNA in a form that keeps it stable for days at ambient temperatures. We report this integration here, with a surprisingly simple workflow. DP-LAMP with a reverse transcriptase was found to amplify arboviral RNA directly from Q-paper, without requiring a separate elution step. This capture-amplification-detection architecture can be multiplexed, with the entire system integrated into a device that can support a campaign of surveillance, in the wild outdoors, that reports the prevalence of arboviruses from field-captured mosquitoes.
Nucleobase pairs in DNA match hydrogen-bond donor and acceptor groups on the nucleobases. However, these can adopt more than one tautomeric form, and can consequently pair with nucleobases other than ...their canonical complements, possibly a source of natural mutation. These issues are now being re-visited by synthetic biologists increasing the number of replicable pairs in DNA by exploiting unnatural hydrogen bonding patterns, where tautomerism can also create mutation. Here, we combine spectroscopic measurements on methylated analogs of isoguanine tautomers and tautomeric mixtures with statistical analyses to a set of isoguanine analogs, the complement of isocytosine, the 5th and 6th "letters" in DNA.
Enzymatic ligation methods are useful in diagnostic detection of DNA sequences. Here we describe the investigation of nonenzymatic phosphorothioate-iodide DNA autoligation chemistry as a method for ...detection and identification of both RNA and DNA sequences. Combining ligation specificity with the hybridization specificity of the ligated product is shown to yield discrimination of a point mutation as high as >10(4)-fold. Unlike enzymatic ligations, this reaction is found to be equally efficient on RNA or DNA templates. The reaction is also shown to exhibit a significant level of self-amplification, with the template acting in catalytic fashion to ligate multiple pairs of probes. A strategy for fluorescence labeling of three autoligating energy transfer (ALET) probes and directly competing them for autoligation on a target sequence is described. The method is tested in several formats, including solution phase, gel, and blot assays. The ALET probe design offers direct RNA detection, combining high sequence specificity with an easily detectable color change by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET).
As with natural nucleic acids, pairing between artificial nucleotides can be influenced by tautomerism, with different placements of protons on the heterocyclic nucleobase changing patterns of ...hydrogen bonding that determine replication fidelity. For example, the major tautomer of isoguanine presents a hydrogen bonding donor-donor-acceptor pattern complementary to the acceptor-acceptor-donor pattern of 5-methylisocytosine. However, in its minor tautomer, isoguanine presents a hydrogen bond donor-acceptor-donor pattern complementary to thymine. Calculations, crystallography, and physical organic experiments suggest that this tautomeric ambiguity might be "fixed" by replacing the N-7 nitrogen of isoguanine by a CH unit. To test this hypothesis, we prepared the triphosphate of 2'-deoxy-7-deazaiso-guanosine and used it in PCR to estimate an effective tautomeric ratio "seen" by Taq DNA polymerase. With 7-deazaisoguanine, fidelity-per-round was ∼92%. The analogous PCR with isoguanine gave a lower fidelity-per-round of ∼86%. These results confirm the hypothesis with polymerases, and deepen our understanding of the role of minor groove hydrogen bonding and proton tautomerism in both natural and expanded genetic "alphabets", major targets in synthetic biology.