Life On Earth May Have Started With RNA, Rewriting Life’s Origin Story

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Researchers in Japan have created RNA that can multiply, evolve, and generate sophistication by itself, providing further proof that life on this planet might just have begun with RNA.

The ‘RNA world’ idea has been bolstered by a new research undertaken by experts at the University of Tokyo, which shows that RNA’s special abilities may clarify how life began hundreds of millions of years ago.

One of the most important molecules in today’s biological systems may be used as a stepping stone to an emerging ecosystem if it operates synergistically.

For all practical purposes, life is nothing more than an endless stream of self-replicating molecule variations that may or may not be able to maintain their integrity long enough to produce further copies.

Each cycle of reproduction was examined and studied using droplets of water immersed in oil that had been duplicated and copied upwards of 100 times. They first questioned that such a wide range of RNAs could cohabit and flourish.

For example, the “competitive exclusion principle” in biological evolution asserts that several species cannot live if they all compete for much the same supplies. As a result, the molecules must find a method to employ a variety of resources in order to maintain their diversity.

Assuming RNA do not fight for nutrients but instead depend on each other in some form of host-parasite relationship, this really is conceivable. The remaining RNA replicators will become extinct if even one of them is destroyed.

Our understanding of the RNA world has improved, but it does not prove how life began on Terra eons ago. To do so, we’d want a wide range of facts, ranging from geology through astrophysics, in order to put together a compelling argument.

This findings were published in Nature Communications.

William Reid
A science writer through and through, William Reid’s first starting working on offline local newspapers. An obsessive fascination with all things science/health blossomed from a hobby into a career. Before hopping over to Optic Flux, William worked as a freelancer for many online tech publications including ScienceWorld, JoyStiq and Digg. William serves as our lead science and health reporter.