PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New study reveals why nature picked today’s proteins

2025-09-29
(Press-News.org) Why did life on Earth choose alpha amino acids as the building blocks of proteins? A new study suggests the answer lies in the stability of their inter-molecular interactions. Researchers found that primitive peptide-like molecules made from alpha backbones formed more durable, compartment-like structures than their longer beta counterparts, giving them a potential evolutionary advantage. The findings propose an assembly-driven model for the origins of life, offering fresh insight into how chemistry shaped biology.

A new study from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem sheds light on one of life’s greatest mysteries: why biology is based on a very specific set of amino acids, and in particular, why nature selected alpha amino acids as the foundation for proteins.

The research, led by Dr. Moran Frenkel-Pinter and her lab members Ms. Sarah Fisher and Mr. Yishi Ezerzer of the Institute of Chemistry and the Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology at the Hebrew University, explored the properties of depsipeptides—simple model peptide-like molecules that could have formed on the early Earth through natural processes. Unlike modern peptides, depsipeptides contain a mix of ester and amide bonds, making them easier to form under prebiotic conditions but less stable over time.

Every living organism on Earth forms its proteins from the exact same set of 20 amino acids. Why that specific set? The new study suggests that life’s dependence on these 20 amino acids is no accident. A key question has puzzled scientists for decades: why did life favor alpha amino acids over their beta or gamma counterparts, even though all were abundant on the prebiotic Earth? To test whether molecular assembly played a role, Frenkel-Pinter and her team synthesized depsipeptides using a wide range of hydroxy and amino acids, then observed their ability to self-assemble in solution.

The results were striking. Depsipeptides built from alpha acids readily formed stable, droplet-like assemblies that persisted for weeks, even after freezing and thawing. In contrast, beta-based assemblies, if formed, phase-separated more quickly in solution and showed significantly lower physical stability. This difference, the researchers argue, could have been a decisive factor in the evolutionary “choice” of the alpha backbone.

“Self-assembly is one of life’s most fundamental prerequisites,” said Dr. Frenkel-Pinter. “Our findings suggest that the superior ability of alpha-based proto-peptides to form stable compartments may have given them a crucial evolutionary edge, setting the stage for the protein backbones we see in biology today.”

“The question of why evolution handpicked a specific set of amino acids has remained a mystery for a very long time. Taking even a single step toward answering this long-lasting question is remarkable, and it is a privilege to contribute to this pursuit”said Yishi Ezerzer, a master's student co-leading this project together with Sarah Fisher from the Frenkel-Pinter group. "We demonstrate here, for the first time, the ability of depsipeptids to self-assemble, similar to modern peptides. While these findings are a breakthrough in the field of chemical evolution, they may also have future implications for other fields such as the pharmaceutical industry." said Fisher.

The study marks the first time that the assembly properties of alpha and beta proto-peptide backbones have been directly compared. By demonstrating that stability at the molecular level could have influenced chemical evolution, the research proposes an assembly-driven selection model for life’s earliest building blocks.

These findings add a new dimension to origins-of-life studies, suggesting that it was not just chemical reactivity but also the capacity for long-lasting self-assembly that shaped the transition from prebiotic chemistry to biology.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The first animals on Earth may have been sea sponges, study suggests

2025-09-29
A team of MIT geochemists has unearthed new evidence in very old rocks suggesting that some of the first animals on Earth were likely ancestors of the modern sea sponge.  In a study appearing today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers report that they have identified “chemical fossils” that may have been left by ancient sponges in rocks that are more than 541 million years old. A chemical fossil is a remnant of a biomolecule that originated from a living organism that has since been buried, transformed, and preserved in sediment, sometimes for hundreds of millions of years.  The newly identified chemical fossils are special types ...

Scientists map the navigation styles of wild cats and dogs

2025-09-29
The next time you watch your dog visit the same places around your yard or notice that your cat seems to explore a new area every time it ventures outside, consider this: you might be witnessing an ancient evolutionary strategy in action. A new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences during the week of September 29, 2025 reveals that wild canids have, on average, both a greater density of travel routeways and a greater probability of routeway usage than wild felids. Led by University of Maryland researchers, the ...

Polyphenols Applications World Congress and Iprona will launch Global Call to Advance Robust, Reproducible Polyphenol Research, next October in Malta

2025-09-29
At the 18th World Congress on Polyphenols Applications, which will be held in Malta on October 2-3, 2025, Iprona and Polyphenols Applications will announce a global call to action, inviting researchers to strengthen the quality and reproducibility of polyphenol science. Through this initiative, ElderCraft®, a polyphenol-standardised European black elderberry (Sambucus nigra) water extract, is now available at no cost to qualified academic and clinical research groups worldwide. ElderCraft® is a polyphenol and anthocyanin-rich extract, sourced exclusively from ...

Adaptive radiation therapy increases safety and preserves quality of life, says study

2025-09-29
For patients with recurrent retroperitoneal sarcomas that cannot be treated surgically, treatment choices are limited. These tumors can grow quite large in the abdomen adjacent to vital organs or enmeshed within the bowel. Given their radioresistant nature they require high doses of radiation that risk damaging healthy nearby tissue. Once patients have undergone an initial radiation course, doctors are often left with no safe radiation treatment option. But a pilot study from Fox Chase Cancer Center, presented at the 2025 American ...

Electric space heating, appliances reduce US residential energy consumption

2025-09-29
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Electric space heating systems and appliances like water heaters can help American homeowners reduce their energy use, and possibly their utility bills, according to a team led by researchers at Penn State. The researchers set out to identify the most important factors driving U.S. on-site residential energy consumption, which the team said accounts for approximately 21% of primary energy consumption in the country and is more complex than commercial energy use. They found that electric heating systems like heat pumps, compared to systems that rely on natural gas and oil, had the largest impact on reducing on-site energy ...

Could your next job interview be with a chatbot? New study seeks to help bring fairness into AI-powered hiring

2025-09-29
Landing a job traditionally meant polishing a resume, printing extra copies and sitting across from a hiring manager. Today, the first “person” to evaluate you might not be a person at all — it could be a chatbot powered by artificial intelligence. These automated systems can ask questions, score responses and even recommend who gets hired. Rice University’s Tianjun Sun has received a National Science Foundation award to lead a two-year collaborative project with the University of Florida examining how AI interview systems work — and how to make them more fair. For employers, chatbot interviews promise consistency ...

Intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) matches proton therapy in patient-reported outcomes for oropharyngeal cancer

2025-09-29
SAN FRANCISCO, September 29, 2025 — A new phase III clinical trial finds that intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) and proton beam therapy resulted in similar quality-of-life outcomes and low rates of side effects for people with locally advanced oropharyngeal cancer. The TORPEdO trial, a randomized study conducted across the United Kingdom, found no meaningful differences between the treatments in patient-reported quality of life, swallowing function or feeding tube dependence at one year. Both advanced radiation approaches resulted in excellent ...

Radiation therapy after surgery safely reduces pelvic relapse risk from locally advanced, muscle-invasive bladder cancer

2025-09-29
SAN FRANCISCO, September 29, 2025 — Radiation therapy could be an underused tool to reduce pelvic relapse risk for patients with locally advanced, muscle-invasive bladder cancer, according to results of a new phase III randomized trial. In the study, moderate doses of radiation therapy after bladder removal surgery sharply cut the rates of cancer returning in the pelvis without adding serious side effects. Findings of the Bladder Adjuvant RadioTherapy (BART) trial conducted at centers across India will be presented today at the American Society ...

Intensity modulated radiotherapy matches proton beam therapy for head and neck cancer

2025-09-29
Intensity-modulated radiotherapy is as good as proton beam therapy for treating people with head and neck cancer, according to the results of a Cancer Research UK-funded clinical trial. The TORPEdO trial funded by Cancer Research UK and The Taylor Family Foundation, led by The Christie NHS Foundation Trust and sponsored by the Institute of Cancer Research, London, compared two forms of highly targeted radiotherapy for head and neck cancer – proton beam therapy (PBT) and intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). Presented at the American Society of Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) Annual Meeting in San Francisco, California, the initial results of ...

Simultaneous synthesis of all 21 types of tRNA in vitro

2025-09-29
Collaborative research by the University of Tokyo and RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research has led to the development of a new method for simultaneously synthesizing all transfer RNA (tRNA) required for protein synthesis in a reconstituted translation system in vitro. Currently, humans rely on living organisms (bacteria, yeast, plants, and animals) for the production of pharmaceuticals and food. However, living organisms are susceptible to environmental changes, breeding improvements require time, and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Global psychiatry mourns Professor Dan Stein, visionary who transformed mental health science across Africa and beyond

KIST develops eco-friendly palladium recovery technology to safeguard resource security

Statins significantly reduce mortality risk for adults with diabetes, regardless of cardiovascular risk

Brain immune cells may drive more damage in females than males with Alzheimer’s

Evidence-based recommendations empower clinicians to manage epilepsy in pregnancy

Fungus turns bark beetles’ defenses against them

There are new antivirals being tested for herpesviruses. Scientists now know how they work

CDI scientist, colleagues author review of global burden of fungus Candida auris

How does stroke influence speech comprehension?

B cells transiently unlock their plasticity, risking lymphoma development

Advanced AI dodel predicts spoken language outcomes in deaf children after cochlear implants

Multimodal imaging-based cerebral blood flow prediction model development in simulated microgravity

Accelerated streaming subgraph matching framework is faster, more robust, and scalable

Gestational diabetes rose every year in the US since 2016

OHSU researchers find breast cancer drug boosts leukemia treatment

Fear and medical misinformation regarding risk of progression or recurrence among patients with breast cancer

Glucagonlike peptide-1 receptor agonists and asthma risk in adolescents with obesity

Reviving dormant immunity: Millimeter waves reprogram the immunosuppressive microenvironment to potentiate immunotherapy without obvious side effects

Safety decision-making for autonomous vehicles integrating passenger physiological states by fNIRS

Fires could emit more air pollution than previously estimated

A new way to map how cells choose their fate

Numbers in our sights affect how we perceive space

SIMJ announces global collaborative book project in commemoration of its 75th anniversary

Air pollution exposure and birth weight

Obstructive sleep apnea risk and mental health conditions among older adults

How talking slows eye movements behind the wheel

The Ceramic Society of Japan’s Oxoate Ceramics Research Association launches new international book project

Heart-brain connection: international study reveals the role of the vagus nerve in keeping the heart young

Researchers identify Rb1 as a predictive biomarker for a new therapeutic strategy in some breast cancers

Survey reveals ethical gaps slowing AI adoption in pediatric surgery

[Press-News.org] New study reveals why nature picked today’s proteins