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RNA–Amino Acid Connection on Primitive Earth

A recent study conducted by researchers has shown how two essential components of life, RNA (ribonucleic acid) and amino acids, may have combined under conditions similar to those present on early Earth around four billion years ago

Deeksha Upadhyay 08 September 2025 16:40

RNA–Amino Acid Connection on Primitive Earth

What is ribonucleic acid (RNA)?

Ribonucleic acid (RNA) is a crucial biomolecule necessary for existence. It contains genetic information, aids in protein synthesis, and executes catalytic and regulatory functions.

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Although akin to DNA, it is chemically more unstable and functionally more adaptable.

Nucleotides: RNA consists of nucleotides, with each having a phosphate group, a ribose sugar, and one of the four nitrogenous bases.

Single-stranded: In contrast to the double helix of DNA, RNA typically exists as a solitary strand. Nevertheless, it has the ability to bend into intricate three-dimensional forms featuring loops and helices.

RNA consists of four nitrogenous bases: Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, and Uracil.

Base Pairing: Uracil pairs with Adenine, while Guanine pairs with Cytosine.

What is an Amino Acid?

An amino acid is a natural substance that acts as a essential component for proteins.

They may serve as an energy source for the body when carbohydrates and fats are not easily accessible.

Categories of amino acids: The human body comprises 20 standard amino acids that unite to create proteins.

Main Insights from the Research

Scientists discovered that amino acids can bind directly to RNA without the need for enzymes, relying solely on basic prebiotic chemistry in water at neutral pH.

The amino acids initially interacted with this thiol compound (pantetheine) to create a thioester, a high-energy intermediate, which then transferred the amino acid to the end of the RNA strand.

Peptide synthesis: After amino acids became attached to RNA (aminoacyl-RNA), additional reactions within the same environment resulted in the creation of short peptides (sequences of two or more amino acids) in the absence of proteins or enzymes.

This illustrates a possible primitive route to proteins.

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Importance for Theories Regarding the Origin of Life

The results successfully connect two theoretical models;

RNA World Hypothesis: Suggests that self-replicating RNA molecules were the initial “life-like” forms, containing genetic information and executing catalytic roles.

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