RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Emergence of ribozyme and tRNA-like structures from mineral-rich muddy pools on prebiotic earth JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 2020.02.12.944926 DO 10.1101/2020.02.12.944926 A1 Suvam Roy A1 Niraja V. Bapat A1 Julien Derr A1 Sudha Rajamani A1 Supratim Sengupta YR 2020 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/02/13/2020.02.12.944926.abstract AB The RNA world hypothesis, although a viable one regarding the origin of life on earth, has so far failed to provide a compelling explanation for the synthesis of RNA molecules with catalytic functions, from free nucleotides via abiotic processes. To tackle this long-standing problem, we develop a realistic model for the onset of the RNA world, using experimentally determined rates for polymerization reactions. We start with minimal assumptions about the initial state that only requires the presence of short oligomers or just free nucleotides and consider the effects of environmental cycling by dividing a day into a dry, semi-wet and wet phases that are distinguished by the nature of reactions they support. Long polymers, with maximum lengths sometimes exceeding 100 nucleotides, spontaneously emerge due to a combination of non-enzymatic, non-templated polymer extension and template-directed primer extension processes. The former helps in increasing the lengths of RNA strands, whereas the later helps in producing complementary copies of the strands. Strands also undergo hydrolysis in a structure-dependent manner that favour breaking of bonds connecting unpaired nucleotides. We identify the most favourable conditions needed for the emergence of ribozyme and tRNA-like structures and double stranded RNA molecules, classify all RNA strands on the basis of their secondary structures and determine their abundance in the population. Our results indicate that under suitable environmental conditions, non-enzymatic processes would have been sufficient to lead to the emergence of a variety of ribozyme-like molecules with complex secondary structures and potential catalytic functions.