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Comparing Protocell and Surface-Based Models of RNA Replicator Systems and Determining Favourable Conditions for Linkage of Functional Strands / Simulations of RNA Replicator SystemsShah, Vismay January 2019 (has links)
In hypothesized RNA-World scenarios, replication of RNA strands is catalyzed by error-prone polymerase ribozymes. Incorrect replication leads to the creation of non-functional, parasitic strands which can invade systems of replicators and lead to their death. Studies have shown two solutions to this problem: spatial clustering of polymerases in models featuring elements to limit diffusion, and group selection in models featuring protocells. Making a quantitative comparison of the methods using results from the literature has proven difficult due to differences in model design. Here we develop computational models of replication of a system of polymerases, polymerase complements and parasites in both spatial models and protocell models with near identical dynamics to make meaningful comparison viable. We compare the models in terms of the maximum mutation rate survivable by the system (the error threshold) as well as the minimum replication rate constant required. We find that protocell models are capable of sustaining much higher maximum mutation rates, and survive under much lower minimum replication rates than equivalent surface models. We then consider cases where parasites are favoured in replication, and show that the advantage of protocell models is increased. Given that a system of RNA strands undergoing catalytic replication by a polymerase is fairly survivable in protocell models, we attempt to determine whether isolated strands can develop into genomes. We extend our protocell model to include additional functional strands varying in length (and thus replication rate) and allow for the linkage of strands to form proto-chromosomes. We determine that linkage is possible over a broad range of lengths, and is stable when considering the joining of short functional strands to the polymerase (and the same for the complementary sequences). Moreover, linkage of short functional strands to the polymerase assures more cells remain viable post division by ensuing a good quantity of polymerase equivalents are present in the parent cell prior to splitting. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc) / Collections of RNA polymers are good candidates for the origin of life. RNA is able to store genetic information and act as polymerase ribozymes allowing RNA to replicate RNA. Polymerases have been experimentally developed in labs, however none are sufficiently general to work well in an origins of life setting. These polymerases are vulnerable to mistakes during copying, making survival of RNA systems difficult. Such systems have been studied by computer simulations, showing that the strands need to be kept together for survival, either on surfaces or in primitive cells. Differences in the details of the models has made comparing the surfaces to cells difficult. This work creates a unified model base allowing for comparison of these two environments. We find that the existence of primitive cells is very beneficial to systems of RNA polymers and thus it is likely such cells existed at the origin of life.
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Replicator Dynamics in ProtocellsStadler, Peter F., Stadler, Bärbel M.R. 17 October 2018 (has links)
Replicator equations have been studied for three decades as a generic dynamical
system modelling replication processes. Here we show how they arise naturally in
models of self-replicating polymers and discuss some of their basic properties. We
then concentrate on a minimal dynamic model of a protocell by coupling replicating
polymers with a growing membrane.
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Computer Simulations of RNA Replication in ProtocellsSanders, Quentin January 2024 (has links)
The RNA world hypothesis posits that at some stage in the development of life, RNA functioned as both an informational polymer and a catalyst for important reactions. However, many questions remain as to how RNA molecules might have evolved into living organisms. This thesis uses computer simulations to model processes thought to be important to the development of an RNA world. First, a model is discussed which describes non-enzymatic polymerization of single-stranded RNA from different kinds of activated nucleotides, a necessary first step towards an RNA world. It was found that a system undergoing polymerization of RNA from 5′-activated triphosphates or imidazolides behaves differently from an equilibrium system undergoing reversible polymerization reactions from 2′,3′-cyclic monophosphates, for example. In the 5′-triphosphate case, the system is not in equilibrium but rather in a state of circular reaction flux that must be maintained by an external source of phosphates. This model is then adapted to investigate non-enzymatic template-directed replication of RNA strands. It is found that this process fulfills all the necessary requirements to function as a metabolism which maintains a difference between the outside non-living environment and the internal environment of the cell. Finally, byproducts arising from the template copying mechanism in this model are discussed, including the development of highly regular sequence patterns in the strand population due to selection for the ability to form duplexes with neighbouring strands. Altogether, this thesis illustrates new implications, potential pitfalls, and possibilities of the RNA world hypothesis for the origin of life. In particular, it emphasizes the fundamental link between the processes of replication and metabolism, both of which must have been crucial to the functioning of the earliest protocells. This link has been largely overlooked in scientific literature on the topic to date. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc) / For millennia, humanity has told stories about the origin of life. Since the 1960s, scientists have hypothesized that RNA is a key player in this origin story. RNA can both hold information and catalyze chemical reactions, meaning only one molecule is needed for both these crucial functions. However, many questions remain about how this would work in practice. This project used computer simulations to model steps along the path from RNA to living organisms. First, a model was developed for the formation of single-stranded RNA from building block molecules. The model was then expanded to include copying of existing RNA strands, and it was found that this process constitutes a metabolism. Finally, it was discovered that over time the copying process produces simple patterns in the sequence of building blocks that make up the RNA strands. Altogether, these findings emphasize the link between replication and metabolism in early cells.
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