Publication | Closed Access
Transient compartmentalization of RNA replicators prevents extinction due to parasites
160
Citations
34
References
2016
Year
EngineeringMolecular BiologyBiological EvolutionMolecular ReplicatorsParasitic ReplicatorsRna Structure PredictionRna BiologyDna ReplicationDirected EvolutionBiological Life CycleBiologyPattern FormationNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyRna ReplicatorsSmall RnaEvolutionary TheorySymbiosisSystems BiologyGenome Editing
The appearance of molecular replicators (molecules that can be copied) was probably a critical step in the origin of life. However, parasitic replicators would take over and would have prevented life from taking off unless the replicators were compartmentalized in reproducing protocells. Paradoxically, control of protocell reproduction would seem to require evolved replicators. We show here that a simpler population structure, based on cycles of transient compartmentalization (TC) and mixing of RNA replicators, is sufficient to prevent takeover by parasitic mutants. TC tends to select for ensembles of replicators that replicate at a similar rate, including a diversity of parasites that could serve as a source of opportunistic functionality. Thus, TC in natural, abiological compartments could have allowed life to take hold.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1