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Analysis of codon:anticodon interactions within the ribosome provides new insights into codon reading and the genetic code structure

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2001

VALERY I. LIM
Affiliation:
Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences, 117984 Moscow, Russia
JAMES F. CURRAN
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27109, USA
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Abstract

Although the decoding rules have been largely elucidated, the physical-chemical reasons for the “correctness” of codon:anticodon duplexes have never been clear. In this work, on the basis of the available data, we propose that the correct codon:anticodon duplexes are those whose formation and interaction with the ribosomal decoding center are not accompanied by uncompensated losses of hydrogen and ionic bonds. Other factors such as proofreading, base–base stacking and aminoacyl–tRNA concentration contribute to the efficiency and accuracy of aminoacyl–tRNA selection, and certainly these factors are important; but we suggest that analyses of hydrogen and ionic bonding alone provides a robust first-order approximation of decoding accuracy. Thus our model can simplify predictions about decoding accuracy and error. The model can be refined with data, but is already powerful enough to explain all of the available data on decoding accuracy. Here we predict which duplexes should be considered correct, which duplexes are responsible for virtually all misreading, and we suggest an evolutionary scheme that gave rise to the mixed boxes of the genetic code.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2001 RNA Society

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