Error Minimization and Coding Triplet/Binding Site Associations Are Independent Features of the Canonical Genetic Code
- 6 October 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Molecular Evolution
- Vol. 61 (5) , 597-607
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00239-004-0314-2
Abstract
The canonical genetic code has been reported both to be error minimizing and to show stereochemical associations between coding triplets and binding sites. In order to test whether these two properties are unexpectedly overlapping, we generated 200,000 randomized genetic codes using each of five randomization schemes, with and without randomization of stop codons. Comparison of the code error (difference in polar requirement for single-nucleotide codon interchanges) with the coding triplet concentrations in RNA binding sites for eight amino acids shows that these properties are independent and uncorrelated. Thus, one is not the result of the other, and error minimization and triplet associations probably arose independently during the history of the genetic code. We explicitly show that prior fixation of a stereochemical core is consistent with an effective later minimization of error.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- ORIGINS OF THE GENETIC CODE: The Escaped Triplet TheoryAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 2005
- A More Complex Isoleucine Aptamer with a Cognate TripletJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2005
- Selection of the simplest RNA that binds isoleucineRNA, 2003
- Arginine-Binding RNAs Resembling TAR Identified by in Vitro SelectionBiochemistry, 1996
- RNAs with Dual Specificity and Dual RNAs with Similar SpecificityScience, 1994
- In vitro selection of RNA molecules that bind specific ligandsNature, 1990
- Systematic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment: RNA Ligands to Bacteriophage T4 DNA PolymeraseScience, 1990
- Selection in vitro of an RNA enzyme that specifically cleaves single-stranded DNANature, 1990
- Genetic code originsNature, 1989
- Unorthodox codon reading and the evolution of the genetic codeCell, 1981