Abstract

The structure of the metabolic network is highly conserved, but we know little about its evolutionary origins. Key for explaining the early evolution of metabolism is solving a chicken–egg dilemma, which describes that enzymes are made from the very same molecules they produce. The recent discovery of several nonenzymatic reaction sequences that topologically resemble central metabolism has provided experimental support for a “metabolism first” theory, in which at least part of the extant metabolic network emerged on the basis of nonenzymatic reactions. But how could evolution kick-start on the basis of a metal catalyzed reaction sequence, and how could the structure of nonenzymatic reaction sequences be imprinted on the metabolic network to remain conserved for billions of years? We performed an in vitro screening where we add the simplest components of metabolic enzymes, proteinogenic amino acids, to a nonenzymatic, iron-driven reaction network that resembles glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP). We observe that the presence of the amino acids enhanced several of the nonenzymatic reactions. Particular attention was triggered by a reaction that resembles a rate-limiting step in the oxidative PPP. A prebiotically available, proteinogenic amino acid cysteine accelerated the formation of RNA nucleoside precursor ribose-5-phosphate from 6-phosphogluconate. We report that iron and cysteine interact and have additive effects on the reaction rate so that ribose-5-phosphate forms at high specificity under mild, metabolism typical temperature and environmental conditions. We speculate that accelerating effects of amino acids on rate-limiting nonenzymatic reactions could have facilitated a stepwise enzymatization of nonenzymatic reaction sequences, imprinting their structure on the evolving metabolic network.

Highlights

  • We discover that amino acids have a broad impact on the glycolysis and phosphate pathway (PPP)-like nonenzymatic metabolism–like reactions occurring in water

  • An in vitro screening was devised in order to assess the influence of proteinogenic amino acids on the metabolism-like nonenzymatic reactivity of glycolytic and PPP intermediates [47,48]

  • The historical biochemistry textbook has primarily explained the function of metabolism with the need for the biosynthesis of the cellular building blocks, like amino acids, nucleotides, and lipids

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Summary

Introduction

Several sugar phosphate products formed and indicated a metabolism-like topology of a nonenzymatic reaction network (Fig 1D and 1E; see S1 and S2 Data and Materials and methods). In the presence of all other amino acids, 6-phosphogluconate was stable and did not yield any significant concentration of ribose-5-phosphate or other intermediates of the PPP (Fig 1D).

Results
Conclusion

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