Analysis of in vitro evolution reveals the underlying distribution of catalytic activity among random sequences

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Abstract

The emergence of catalytic RNA is believed to have been a key event during the origin of life. Understanding how catalytic activity is distributed across random sequences is fundamental to estimating the probability that catalytic sequences would emerge. Here, we analyze the in vitro evolution of triphosphorylating ribozymes and translate their fitnesses into absolute estimates of catalytic activity for hundreds of ribozyme families. The analysis efficiently identified highly active ribozymes and estimated catalytic activitywith good accuracy. The evolutionary dynamics follow Fisher's Fundamental Theorem of Natural Selection and a corollary, permitting retrospective inference of the distribution of fitness and activity in the random sequence pool for the first time. The frequency distribution of rate constants appears to be log-normal, with a surprisingly steep dropoff at higher activity, consistent with a mechanism for the emergence of activity as the product of many independent contributions.

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Pressman, A., Moretti, J. E., Campbell, G. W., Müller, U. F., & Chen, I. A. (2017). Analysis of in vitro evolution reveals the underlying distribution of catalytic activity among random sequences. Nucleic Acids Research, 45(14), 8167–8179. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkx540

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