2 Prospects for Understanding the Origin of the RNA World
Abstract
The RNA World means different things to different authors, so it would be futile to attempt a restrictive definition. All RNA World hypotheses include three basic assumptions: (1) At some time in the evolution of life, genetic continuity was assured by the replication of RNA; (2) Watson-Crick base-pairing was the key to replication; (3) genetically encoded proteins were not involved as catalysts. RNA World hypotheses differ in what they assume about life that may have preceded the RNA World, about the metabolic complexity of the RNA World, and about the role of low-molecular-weight cofactors, possibly including peptides, in the chemistry of the RNA World.
It should be emphasized that the existence of an RNA World as a precursor of our DNA/protein world is a hypothesis. We find it...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.49-77