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

Powerful supercomputer peers into the origin of life

2010-10-05
(Press-News.org) OAK RIDGE, Tenn., Oct. 4, 2010 -- Supercomputer simulations at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory are helping scientists unravel how nucleic acids could have contributed to the origins of life.

A research team led by Jeremy Smith, who directs ORNL's Center for Molecular Biophysics and holds a Governor's Chair at University of Tennessee, used molecular dynamics simulation to probe an organic chemical reaction that may have been important in the evolution of ribonucleic acids, or RNA, into early life forms.

Certain types of RNA called ribozymes are capable of both storing genetic information and catalyzing chemical reactions – two necessary features in the formation of life. The research team looked at a lab-grown ribozyme that catalyzes the Diels-Alder reaction, which has broad applications in organic chemistry.

"Life means making molecules that reproduce themselves, and it requires molecules and are sufficiently complex to do so," Smith said. "If a ribozyme like the Diels-Alderase is capable of doing organic chemistry to build up complex molecules, then potentially something like that could have been present to create the building blocks of life."

The research team found a theoretical explanation for why the Diels-Alder ribozyme needs magnesium to function. Computational models of the ribozyme's internal motions allowed the researchers to capture and understand the finer details of the fast-paced reaction. The static nature of conventional experimental techniques such as chemical probing and X-ray analysis had not been able to reveal the dynamics of the system.

"Computer simulations can provide insight into biological systems that you can't get any other way," Smith said. "Since these structures are changing so much, the dynamic aspects are difficult to understand, but simulation is a good way of doing it."

Smith explained how their calculations showed that the ribozyme's internal dynamics included an active site, or "mouth," which opens and closes to control the reaction. The concentration of magnesium ions directly impacts the ribozyme's movements.

"When there's no magnesium present, the mouth closes, the substrate can't get in, and the reaction can't take place. We found that magnesium ions bind to a special location on the ribozyme to keep the mouth open," Smith said.

### The research was published as "Magnesium-Dependent Active-Site Conformational Selection in the Diels-Alderase Ribozyme" in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. The research team included Tomasz Berezniak and Mai Zahran, who are Smith's graduate students, and Petra Imhof and Andres Jäschke from the University of Heidelberg.

Smith's research was supported by Laboratory Directed Research and Development program funding. The bulk of the simulations were performed on the Kraken supercomputer at the UT/ORNL National Institute for Computational Sciences, supported by a National Science Foundation Teragrid allocation, and the resulting data were analyzed on the Heidelberg Linux Cluster System at the Interdisciplinary Center for Scientific Computing of the University of Heidelberg.

ORNL is managed by UT-Battelle for the Department of Energy's Office of Science.

NOTE TO EDITORS: You may read other press releases from Oak Ridge National Laboratory or learn more about the lab at http://www.ornl.gov/news. Additional information about ORNL is available at the sites below:

Twitter - http://twitter.com/oakridgelabnews

RSS Feeds - http://www.ornl.gov/ornlhome/rss_feeds.shtml

Flickr - http://www.flickr.com/photos/oakridgelab

YouTube - http://www.youtube.com/user/OakRidgeNationalLab

LinkedIn - http://www.linkedin.com/companies/oak-ridge-national-laboratory

Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/Oak.Ridge.National.Laboratory


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Discovery of a cell that suppresses the immune system

2010-10-05
Researchers at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston have identified a new type of cell in mice that dampens the immune system and protects the animal's own cells from immune system attack. This "suppressor" cell reduces the production of harmful antibodies that can drive lupus and other autoimmune diseases in which the immune system mistakenly turns on otherwise healthy organs and tissues. The discovery, published in the September 16 issue of Nature (H Kim, et al.; Vol 467 in Letters), resulted from Lupus Research Institute funding to Harvey Cantor, MD, and ...

Census of Marine Life celebrates 'decade of discovery'

Census of Marine Life celebrates decade of discovery
2010-10-05
Fairbanks, Alaska—The Census of Marine Life, a ten-year initiative to describe the distribution and diversity of ocean life, draws to a close today with a celebration, symposium and press conference in London. At the press conference, scientists revealed the results of the census, including the discovery of new species, new patterns of biodiversity and more. Scientists at the University of Alaska Fairbanks have played a major role in what the census calls its "decade of discovery." UAF scientists have led two multi-year projects as part of the census. Both projects—the ...

'Living Voters Guide' invites Washington voters to hash out ballot initiatives

Living Voters Guide invites Washington voters to hash out ballot initiatives
2010-10-05
Voters across the country are entering the season of ballot measures. In Washington, this fall's nine statewide ballot measures include two competing liquor initiatives, a bond measure for school upgrades, and a much-debated push for the state's first income tax since the 1930s. Into this fray enters an online experiment created by the University of Washington in partnership with the Seattle civic nonprofit CityClub. The Living Voters Guide (www.livingvotersguide.org) aims to spark a civil and objective discussion among Washington voters by letting them work together ...

Depression during pregnancy increases risk for preterm birth and low birth weight

Depression during pregnancy increases risk for preterm birth and low birth weight
2010-10-05
Clinical depression puts pregnant women at increased risk of delivering prematurely and of giving birth to below-normal weight infants, according to a report published Oct. 4 in the Archives of General Psychiatry. Being born too soon and weighing too little at birth can jeopardize the immediate survival and long-term health of babies. Preterm birth and low birth weight are leading causes worldwide of infant and early childhood mortality, respiratory distress, neurological and developmental impairment, cerebral palsy, blindness, hearing loss and other disabilities. Depression ...

Europa's hidden ice chemistry

Europas hidden ice chemistry
2010-10-05
The frigid ice of Jupiter's moon Europa may be hiding more than a presumed ocean: it is likely the scene of some unexpectedly fast chemistry between water and sulfur dioxide at extremely cold temperatures. Although these molecules react easily as liquids—they are well-known ingredients of acid rain—Mark Loeffler and Reggie Hudson at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., now report that they react as ices with surprising speed and high yield at temperatures hundreds of degrees below freezing. Because the reaction occurs without the aid of radiation, it could ...

Research breakthrough hailed on the anniversary of gene discovery

2010-10-05
(Cincinnati, OH) – In a study published today in the Journal, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, an international team of researchers based in the U.S. and UK revealed that they were able to halt the potentially lethal, breath holding episodes associated with the neurological disease Rett syndrome. Rett syndrome is a disorder of the brain that affects around 1 in 10,000 young girls. On October 4, 1999, a groundbreaking study was published showing that the disease is caused by a spontaneous mutation in the gene methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MeCP2). The gene ...

TRMM satellite sees tropical moisture bring heavy rain, flooding to US East Coast

TRMM satellite sees tropical moisture bring heavy rain, flooding to US East Coast
2010-10-05
A deep, stationary trough of low pressure parked over the Ohio and Tennessee valleys west of the Appalachians drew a steady stream of tropical moisture, including the remnants of Tropical Storm Nicole, up the East Coast. The results were heavy rain and flooding from Florida to the coastal Carolinas up into the Chesapeake Bay region and NASA's TRMM satellite captured rainfall from the event. Rain first broke out across the U.S. Southeast as a slow moving front approached from the northwest. The front then became stationary along the eastern seaboard, providing a focus ...

AgriLife Research scientists complete two-year study on short-day onions

2010-10-05
UVALDE – Texas AgriLife Research scientists have recently completed a two-year study on the impact of deficit irrigation and plant density on the growth, yield and quality of short-day onions. Deficit irrigation is a strategy in which water is applied to a crop during its drought-senstitive stages of development and is either applied sparingly or not at all during other growth stages, particularly if there is sufficient rainfall, reducing the overall amount of irrigation through the crop cycle. According to crop production experts, the strategy is particularly helpful ...

Challenges and opportunities for improving community college student success

2010-10-05
WASHINGTON, DC, October 4, 2010—As public concern heightens over current completion rates for students at America's community colleges, a University of Wisconsin-Madison researcher has systematically examined 25 years of rigorous research in search of explanations of success and remedies for dropouts. Sara Goldrick-Rab, Assistant Professor of Educational Policy Studies and of Sociology, points to key contributions made by institutional practices and to the important role that federal and state resources and policies play in shaping colleges' capacity to increase graduation ...

Cluster helps disentangle turbulence in the solar wind

Cluster helps disentangle turbulence in the solar wind
2010-10-05
From Earth, the Sun looks like a calm, placid body that does little more than shine brightly while marching across the sky. Images from a bit closer, of course, show it's an unruly ball of hot gas that can expel long plumes out into space – but even this isn't the whole story. Surrounding the Sun is a roiling wind of electrons and protons that shows constant turbulence at every size scale: long streaming jets, smaller whirling eddies, and even microscopic movements as charged particles circle in miniature orbits. Through it all, great magnetic waves and electric currents ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Pain research reveals new detail of how synapses strengthen

Hidden process behind 2025 Santorini earthquakes uncovered

Giant impactor Theia formed in the inner Solar System

Rebalancing lung repair with immune damage is key to surviving severe influenza

2025 Santorini seismic unrest triggered by “pumping” magma flow

Toxic gut bacteria may drive ulcerative colitis by killing protective immune cells

Rethinking where language comes from

Subverting plasmids to combat antibiotic resistance

Theia and Earth were neighbors

Calcium “waves” shape flies’ eyes

Scientists uncover new on-switch for pain signaling pathway that could lead to safer treatment and relief

Modeling of electrostatic and contact interaction between low-velocity lunar dust and spacecraft

Building a sustainable metals infrastructure: NIST report highlights key strategies

Discovering America’s ‘epilepsy belt’: First-of-its-kind national study reveals US regions with high epilepsy rates among older adults

Texting helps UCSF reach more patients with needed care

Working together to combat the spread of antibiotic resistance

Developing dehydration and other age-related conditions following major surgery linked to dramatically worse outcomes for older adults

Aged blood vessel cells drive metabolic diseases

This moss survived 9 months directly exposed to the elements of space

UC San Diego researchers develop new tool to predict how bacteria influence health

Prediction of optic disc edema progression during spaceflight

Age-based screening for lung cancer surveillance in the US

Study reveals long-term associations of strangulation-related brain injury from intimate partner violence

Monsoon storms will bring heavier rains but become weaker

New therapeutic strategies show promise against a hard-to-treat prostate cancer

Inflammatory biomarkers in ischemic stroke: mechanisms, clinical applications, and future directions

Grants to UC San Diego will boost roadway safety for Native American youth and pedestrians

Announcing the 2025 Mcknight Brain Research Foundation Innovator Awards in Cognitive Aging and Memory Loss: Leah Acker, MD, Ph.D., of Duke University and Erin Gibson, Ph.D., of the Stanford School of

Toward a cervical cancer–free future: Cancer Biology & Medicine highlights science, policy, and equity

Population-specific genetic risk scores advance precision medicine for Han Chinese populations

[Press-News.org] Powerful supercomputer peers into the origin of life