Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




Investigator seeks to uncover roots of dna's 'sweet' secret

Theallineed.com
(NC&T/VMC) Yet the graceful, sinuous profile of the DNA double helix is the result of random chemical reactions in a simmering, primordial stew.

Just how nature arrived at this molecule and its sister molecule, RNA, remains one of the greatest — and potentially unsolvable — scientific mysteries.

But Vanderbilt biochemist Martin Egli, Ph.D., isn't content to simply study these molecules as they are. He wants to know why they are the way they are.

"These molecules are the result of evolution," said Egli, professor of Biochemistry. "Somehow they have been shaped and optimized for a particular purpose."

Research by Vanderbilt biochemist Martin Egli, Ph.D., is providing clues to the origin of DNA. (Photo: Dana Johnson)
"For a chemist, it makes sense to analyze the origin of these molecules."

One particular curiosity: how did DNA and RNA come to incorporate five-carbon sugars into their "backbone" when six-carbon sugars, like glucose, may have been more common? Egli has been searching for the answer to that question for the past 13 years.

Recently, Egli and colleagues solved a structure that divulges DNA's "sweet" secret. In a recent issue of the Journal of the American Chemical Society, Egli and colleagues report the X-ray crystal structure of homo-DNA, an artificial analog of DNA in which the usual five-carbon sugar has been replaced with a six-carbon sugar.

By exchanging the sugars that make up the DNA backbone, researchers can make and test plausible "alternatives" to DNA — alternatives that nature may have tried out before arriving at the final structure. These alternative structures can then reveal why DNA's genetic system is more favorable than the other possible forms.

"If you can change the molecules chemically or functionally, you can see what is so particular about them, why are they optimal, why are they better than others," he said.

Although homo-DNA was first synthesized in 1992, a detailed picture of the molecule's structure had been lacking. Egli's high resolution structure is now able to provide answers to some of the lingering questions about why DNA is made the way it is.

While the homo-DNA structure shows a number of similarities with DNA, it is much more stable than DNA. However, it has a more haphazard appearance than normal DNA, looking more like a "slowly writhing ribbon" than the tightly twisted ladder of DNA.

"The reason that DNA was 'picked' is not because it's thermodynamically extremely stable," Egli said. "There are others — including homo-DNA — that are actually superior in that regard."

Egli's structure also shows that homo-DNA has more flexibility in how the bases (rungs of the ladder) bind. The bases in normal DNA adhere to a somewhat strict binding scheme — guanine (G) binds with cytosine (C) and adenine (A) binds with thymine (T). In this "Watson-Crick" base pairing, the G:C bonds are much stronger than A:T or any other bonds.

"In homo-DNA, the Watson-Crick base pairing rules are changed," Egli said. "For example, G:C is similar to G:G or A:A, so you have a much more versatile pairing system in homo-DNA. Therefore, the nature of the sugar in the backbone affects the pairing rules."

But despite homo-DNA's apparent versatility in base pairing and its thermodynamic stability, other features of the molecule's architecture probably preclude it from being a viable genetic system

For example, it cannot pair with other nucleic acids — unlike DNA and RNA which can and must pair with each other. Also the steep angle, or inclination, between the sugar backbone and the bases of homo-DNA requires that the pairing strands align strictly in an antiparallel fashion — unlike DNA which can adopt a parallel orientation. Finally, the irregular spaces between the "rungs" prevent homo-DNA from taking on the uniform structure DNA uses to store genetic information.

The findings suggest that fully hydroxylated six-carbon sugars probably would not have produced a stable base-pairing system capable of carrying genetic information as efficiently as DNA.

"The structure now provides insight of a chemical nature that (the six-carbon sugar) is just too 'bulky.' It has too many atoms," Egli said.

The new insights provided by this structure lie at the heart of the most fundamental of scientific inquiries — the origin of life on Earth. If the pieces of DNA and RNA hadn't come together just so, life as we know it would not exist.

Although Egli's structure has ruled out six-carbon sugars as viable alternatives for the sugar backbone of DNA, the existence of a plethora of sugars — as well as alternative bases — make for an almost endless number of possibilities from which nature selected the winning DNA combination.

"Homo-DNA is just one alternative system. There are hundreds of sugars, as many as you can think of. It will be almost impossible to look at all of them," Egli said.

"But the big red herring of this work could be that nature never went through these other sugars. Maybe it just hit on gold (these five-carbon sugars) very early and took off from there."

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund.

About the Author
©2006 All rights reserved

  Click here to see related videos
More articles
Chemical tests of cell
Safer suntants through science
Explaining the methane mystery
Improbable buckegg hatched
Killing bugs
Ultramarine blue fades
DNA's 'sweet'
Fuel cell
life organizes in cells
The Zinc
Structure of the protein
Polarized particles
Gold nanocatalysis
Changes in molecules
Mimicking nature
Photon fusion
Desaturase enzyme
Hydrogen and oxygen on water
Spiders' polymer art
Blood clots
Quotes
After twelve years of therapy my psychiatrist said something that brought tears to my eyes. He said, No hablo ingles..
Ronnie Shakes

Accurately delivered, a cream pie is an uncannily precise barometer of humannature.
Noel Godin, pie-throwing anarchist


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
Detroit Clinic Owner, Doctor and Office Manager Indicted in Medicare Infusion Fraud Scheme
Three Miami-Dade County, Fla., residents have been indicted in connection with an alleged $2.3 million Medicare fraud scheme operated out of X-Press Center, a Detroit-area clinic that purported to specialize in providing injection and infusion therapies.
What is the first thing you use the internet for?
Shopping
Look at Mail
Go to Chatrooms
Instant Messaging
Download Stuff
Other
 
Things to ponder
Nobody cares if you can't dance well. Just get up and dance.

Did you know...
Patty Hearst's prison T-shirt: "Being kidnapped is always having to say you're sorry."

Quote of the day
Early morning cheerfulness can be extremely obnoxious.
William Feather

Featured article
Anyone who is keen to watch internet satellite TV channels for free might want to take note that this is entirely possible. The TV bills that pile up every single month can quickly snuff out whatever budget you have set aside for the family.

 
© Lexur