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6 On the Origin of the Ribosome: Coevolution of Subdomains of tRNA and rRNA

Harry F. Noller

Abstract


Translation is one of the most complicated of biological processes, involving literally hundreds of specific macromolecules. Not the least part of this complexity is the structure of the ribosome itself, which even in the relatively simple Escherichia coli version consists of more than 50 different proteins and 3 RNA molecules, giving an aggregate mass of around 2.5 million daltons (Hill et al. 1990). The difficulty of imagining how such a structure evolved is eased somewhat by accepting the notion that the original ribosome was made solely of RNA, as tentatively suggested by Crick (1968) more than two decades ago and asserted with increasing force (Woese 1980) and enthusiasm (Woese and Pace, this volume) since then. Adherents of RNA world scenarios imagine, to varying degrees, that something resembling protein synthesis was carried out by ribozyme-like protoribosomes prior to the advent of ribosomal proteins and translation factors (not to mention aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases). Such scenarios solve the chicken-or-the-egg problem of the molecular evolution of ribosomes but raise some difficult new questions. The most obvious problem is that rRNA itself has a vast and intricate structure containing thousands of nucleotides (see, e.g., Fig. 1) and is not likely to have evolved by chance in a few simple evolutionary events. Compounding this problem is that, prior to the existence of protein synthesis, it is difficult to imagine what selective pressures could have driven its evolution; in other words, the RNA world could not have anticipated the invention of protein synthesis. More likely, it evolved from...

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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.137-156