The origin of a primordial genome through spontaneous symmetry breaking

Publication date

2017-12-01

Authors

Takeuchi, N.ISNI 0000000391843347
Hogeweg, PaulienISNI 0000000392149074
Kaneko, Kunihiko

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

The heredity of a cell is provided by a small number of non-catalytic templates-The genome. How did genomes originate? Here, we demonstrate the possibility that genome-like molecules arise from symmetry breaking between complementary strands of self-replicating molecules. Our model assumes a population of protocells, each containing a population of self-replicating catalytic molecules. The protocells evolve towards maximising the catalytic activities of the molecules to increase their growth rates. Conversely, the molecules evolve towards minimising their catalytic activities to increase their intracellular relative fitness. These conflicting tendencies induce the symmetry breaking, whereby one strand of the molecules remains catalytic and increases its copy number (enzyme-like molecules), whereas the other becomes non-catalytic and decreases its copy number (genome-like molecules). This asymmetry increases the equilibrium cellular fitness by decreasing mutation pressure and increasing intracellular genetic drift. These results implicate conflicting multilevel evolution as a key cause of the origin of genetic complexity.

Keywords

General Chemistry, General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Physics and Astronomy

Citation

Takeuchi, N, Hogeweg, P & Kaneko, K 2017, 'The origin of a primordial genome through spontaneous symmetry breaking', Nature Communications, vol. 8, 250. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00243-x