Abstract

The genetic code contains an alphabet of genetically encoded amino acids. The ten Phase 1 amino acids, including Gly, Ala, Ser, Asp, Glu, Val, Leu, Ile, Pro and Thr, were available from the prebiotic environment, whereas the ten Phase 2 amino acids, including Phe, Tyr, Arg, His, Trp, Asn, Gln, Lys, Cys, and Met, became available only later from amino acid biosyntheses. In the archaeon Methanopyrus kandleri, the oldest organism known, the standard alphabet of 20 amino acids was "frozen" and no additional amino acid was encoded in the subsequent 3 Gyrs. Four decades ago, it was discovered that the code was frozen because all the organisms were so well adapted to the standard amino acids that oligogenic barriers, consisting of genes that are thoroughly dependent on the standard code, would cause loss of viability upon the deletion of any one amino acid from the code. Once the reason for the freezing of the code was ascertained, procedures were devised by scientists worldwide to enable the encoding of novel noncanonical amino acids (ncAAs). These encoded Phase 3 ncAAs now surpass the 20 canonical Phase 2 amino acids in the code.

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