Emergence of function from single RNA sequences by Darwinian evolution
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Abstract
The spontaneous emergence of function from pools of random sequence RNA is widely considered an important transition in the origin of life. However, the plausibility of this hypothetical process and the number of productive evolutionary trajectories in sequence space are unknown. Here we demonstrate that function can arise starting from a single RNA sequence by an iterative process of mutation and selection. Specifically, we describe the discovery of both specific ATP or GTP aptamers - with micromolar affinity for their nucleotide ligand - starting each from a single, homopolymeric poly-A sequence flanked by conserved primer binding sites. Our results indicate that the ab initio presence of large, diverse random sequence pools is not a prerequisite for the emergence of functional RNAs and that the process of Darwinian evolution has the capacity to generate function even from single, largely unstructured RNA sequences with minimal molecular and informational complexity.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00