Title: Evolution of the Genetic Code
1Evolution of the Genetic Code
2Outline
- Introduction the translation mechanism
- Cracking the code
- Genetic code(s)
- The 3 theories of evolution
3Introduction - translation
4tRNA
- Matches amino acids to codons in mRNA
5Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase
- Attach amino acids to tRNA
- Most cells 20 aminoacyl synthetases
- Bacteria less than 20, some incorrectly
attached tRNAs are modified - High-accuracy defining stage
6tRNA
- 61 codons ? lt 61 different tRNAshuman 48
different tRNAs (anticodons)bacteria 31
different tRNAs (anticodons)
BACTERIA
EUKARYOTES
(anticodon base 1) Wobble (codon base 3)
G or I U
G or I C
U A
C G
(anticodon base 1) Wobble (codon base 3)
A,G or I U
G or I C
U or I A
C or U G
7CRACKING THE CODE
- 1953 DNA structure (Watson and Crick)
- 1961 the genetic code (Matthaei and Nirenberg)
8in between
- George Gamow a Russian physicist, is excited by
the double helix - The RNA tie club
Crick (Tyrosine)
Watson (Proline)
9The Diamond code (Gamow,1954)
Problems(1) overlapping code, restricts aa
neighbours.(2) translation in ctyoplasm
10Comaless code (Crick, 1958)
- No commas (proved correct)
- Only 20 of 64 codons are meaningful all other
are skipped. - No frameshift!
- ? a codon such as AAA is meaningless
The most genius theory proved wrong
11Cracked!
- A Cell-free system was devisedin which
UUUUUUUUUUUU was translated (FFFFFFF)
CCCCCCCCCCCC was translated(PPPPPPP)and so
on - Almost disappointing
12The standard genetic code
13The Universal Genetic Code?
- Found in all organisms
- Change in the genetic code would affect all
coding proteins ? lethal. - The frozen accident (Crick, 1968)
14But there isnt only 1 code, but 16!
15- ? The code can evolve.
- ? Codon assignments are non-random
16(No Transcript)
17Adaptation
18- Reduces the effect of translation error
- Reduces the effect of point mutation
- but these are chemical considerations
19Code optimality
- Compare the code(s) with random alternatives
Standard genetic code
20BUT
- This works when the criteria is- polarity- PAM
distance - But it doesnt work with- size
- there is a lot of debate on the validness of
these methods (e.g. DeGulio 2000) - HOW IS CHANGE POSSIBLE?
21Codon Capture
- The codon capture theory (Osawa-Jukes
1988)Following GC content pressure on the
genome, tRNAs disappear and reappear with a
different recognition.
22Codon-Capture Model
- Supposed model in Mycoplasma capricolum
1. TGG (Trp), TGA (Stop)
2. TGG (Trp), TGA ? disappears, replaced for
instance by TAA (Stop)
3. release factor (TGA) disappears (no selective
pressure)
AT pressure
4. TGA reappears, unrecognized
5. tRNA (TGG) for Trp duplicates, and mutates to
recognize TGA. Now TGA codes for Trp
AT pressure reduced
23Evidence in favour
- In Mycoplasma capricolum, tRNA (TGG) and tRNA
(TGA) are on the same operon. - In related bacteria the codon TGG has entirely
disappeared(replaced entirely by TGA)
24The ambiguous intermediate
- Codons did not disappear tRNAs which are
ambiguous, led to fixation of one tRNA codon in
one species an to another in another species - Supporting evidence E.Coli UAG translates to
stop, Trp or selenocysteine. - Replacements of all codons by another a.a. are
not necessarily lethal!Experiment partial
replacement of Ile by Cys in E.Coli resulted in
only low loss in fitness! (Doring and Marliere,
1998)
25Genome streamlining hypothesis
- Pressure to minimize the genome of mitochondria
(or other) obligatory parasites leads to
reassignment of codons. - Transfer of genes to nuclear genomes ? less
constraint on the mitochondria genome.
26History a slowly growing code
- Initial, limited set of amino acids.
- Newly introduced amino acids according to similar
biosynthetic path. - New amino acids did not make drastic change in
the protein. - TheoryFirst base similar biosynthetic
pathwaySecond base similar aa properties
27tRNA, aa-tRNA-Synthetase phylogenies
- aa-tRNA-Synthetases phylogeny supports the
biosynthetic theory - Phylogenies of tRNA and aa-tRNA-Synthetases are
non-congruent - So maybe all this happened within the Last
Common Ancestor of all organisms
28Summary-change in genetic code
- Primordial code expansion of code from few to 20
a.a.s - tRNA and aa-tRNA-Synthetases are invented ? this
enables codon swapping and code optimization - Ambiguity enables change
- Most of these changes in relatively simple
organisms.