Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Albert C. Fahrenbach is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Albert C. Fahrenbach.


Nature Chemistry | 2016

Oligoarginine peptides slow strand annealing and assist non-enzymatic RNA replication

Tony Z. Jia; Albert C. Fahrenbach; Neha P. Kamat; Katarzyna Adamala; Jack W. Szostak

The nonenzymatic replication of RNA is thought to have been a critical process required for the origin of life. One unsolved difficulty with nonenzymatic RNA replication is that template-directed copying of RNA results in a double-stranded product; following strand separation, rapid strand reannealing outcompetes slow nonenzymatic template copying, rendering multiple rounds of RNA replication impossible. Here we show that oligoarginine peptides slow the annealing of complementary oligoribonucleotides by up to several thousand-fold; however, short primers and activated monomers can still bind to template strands, and template-directed primer extension can still occur within a phase-separated condensed state, or coacervate. Furthermore, we show that within this phase, partial template copying occurs even in the presence of full-length complementary strands. This method for enabling further rounds of replication suggests one mechanism by which short, non-coded peptides could have enhanced early cellular fitness, potentially explaining how longer, coded peptides, i.e. proteins, came to prominence in modern biology.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

Thermodynamic insights into 2-thiouridine-enhanced RNA hybridization

Aaron T. Larsen; Albert C. Fahrenbach; Jia Sheng; Julia Pian; Jack W. Szostak

Nucleobase modifications dramatically alter nucleic acid structure and thermodynamics. 2-thiouridine (s2U) is a modified nucleobase found in tRNAs and known to stabilize U:A base pairs and destabilize U:G wobble pairs. The recently reported crystal structures of s2U-containing RNA duplexes do not entirely explain the mechanisms responsible for the stabilizing effect of s2U or whether this effect is entropic or enthalpic in origin. We present here thermodynamic evaluations of duplex formation using ITC and UV thermal denaturation with RNA duplexes containing internal s2U:A and s2U:U pairs and their native counterparts. These results indicate that s2U stabilizes both duplexes. The stabilizing effect is entropic in origin and likely results from the s2U-induced preorganization of the single-stranded RNA prior to hybridization. The same preorganizing effect is likely responsible for structurally resolving the s2U:U pair-containing duplex into a single conformation with a well-defined H-bond geometry. We also evaluate the effect of s2U on single strand conformation using UV- and CD-monitored thermal denaturation and on nucleoside conformation using 1H NMR spectroscopy, MD and umbrella sampling. These results provide insights into the effects that nucleobase modification has on RNA structure and thermodynamics and inform efforts toward improving both ribozyme-catalyzed and nonenzymatic RNA copying.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Common and Potentially Prebiotic Origin for Precursors of Nucleotide Synthesis and Activation

Albert C. Fahrenbach; Constantin Giurgiu; Chun Pong Tam; Li Li; Yayoi Hongo; Masashi Aono; Jack W. Szostak

We have recently shown that 2-aminoimidazole is a superior nucleotide activating group for nonenzymatic RNA copying. Here we describe a prebiotic synthesis of 2-aminoimidazole that shares a common mechanistic pathway with that of 2-aminooxazole, a previously described key intermediate in prebiotic nucleotide synthesis. In the presence of glycolaldehyde, cyanamide, phosphate and ammonium ion, both 2-aminoimidazole and 2-aminooxazole are produced, with higher concentrations of ammonium ion and acidic pH favoring the former. Given a 1:1 mixture of 2-aminoimidazole and 2-aminooxazole, glyceraldehyde preferentially reacts and cyclizes with the latter, forming a mixture of pentose aminooxazolines, and leaving free 2-aminoimidazole available for nucleotide activation. The common synthetic origin of 2-aminoimidazole and 2-aminooxazole and their distinct reactivities are suggestive of a reaction network that could lead to both the synthesis of RNA monomers and to their subsequent chemical activation.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Estimating the capacity for production of formamide by radioactive minerals on the prebiotic Earth

Zachary R. Adam; Yayoi Hongo; H. James Cleaves; Ruiqin Yi; Albert C. Fahrenbach; Isao Yoda; Masashi Aono

Water creates special problems for prebiotic chemistry, as it is thermodynamically favorable for amide and phosphodiester bonds to hydrolyze. The availability of alternative solvents with more favorable properties for the formation of prebiotic molecules on the early Earth may have helped bypass this so-called “water paradox”. Formamide (FA) is one such solvent, and can serve as a nucleobase precursor, but it is difficult to envision how FA could have been generated in large quantities or accumulated in terrestrial surface environments. We report here the conversion of aqueous acetonitrile (ACN) via hydrogen cyanide (HCN) as an intermediate into FA by γ-irradiation under conditions mimicking exposure to radioactive minerals. We estimate that a radioactive placer deposit could produce 0.1‒0.8u2009mol FA km−2 year−1. A uraninite fission zone comparable to the Oklo reactors in Gabon can produce 0.1‒1u2009molu2009m−2 year−1, orders of magnitude greater than other scenarios of FA production or delivery for which reaching sizeable concentrations of FA are problematic. Radioactive mineral deposits may be favorable settings for prebiotic compound formation through emergent geologic processes and FA-mediated organic chemistry.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016

Quantum Mechanical and Experimental Validation that Cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) Forms a 1:1 Inclusion Complex with Tetrathiafulvalene.

Karel J. Hartlieb; Wei Guang Liu; Albert C. Fahrenbach; Anthea K. Blackburn; Marco Frasconi; Nema Hafezi; Sanjeev K. Dey; Amy A. Sarjeant; Charlotte L. Stern; William A. Goddard; J. Fraser Stoddart

The promiscuous encapsulation of π-electron-rich guests by the π-electron-deficient host, cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT(4+)), involves the formation of 1:1 inclusion complexes. One of the most intensely investigated charge-transfer (CT) bands, assumed to result from inclusion of a guest molecule inside the cavity of CBPQT(4+), is an emerald-green band associated with the complexation of tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) and its derivatives. This interpretation was called into question recently in this journal based on theoretical gas-phase calculations that reinterpreted this CT band in terms of an intermolecular side-on interaction of TTF with one of the bipyridinium (BIPY(2+)) units of CBPQT(4+), rather than the encapsulation of TTF inside the cavity of CBPQT(4+). We carried out DFT calculations, including solvation, that reveal conclusively that the CT band emerging upon mixing TTF with CBPQT(4+) arises from the formation of a 1:1 inclusion complex. In support of this conclusion, we have performed additional experiments on a [2]rotaxane in which a TTF unit, located in the middle of its short dumbbell, is prevented sterically from interacting with either one of the two BIPY(2+) units of a CBPQT(4+) ring residing on a separate [2]rotaxane in a side-on fashion. This [2]rotaxane has similar UV/Vis and (1)Hu2005NMR spectroscopic properties with those of 1:1 inclusion complexes of TTF and its derivatives with CBPQT(4+). The [2]rotaxane exists as an equimolar mixture of cis- and trans-isomers associated with the disubstituted TTF unit in its dumbbell component. Solid-state structures were obtained for both isomers, validating the conclusion that the TTF unit, which gives rise to the CT band, resides inside CBPQT(4+).


Complexity | 2018

Prebiotic geochemical automata at the intersection of radiolytic chemistry, physical complexity, and systems biology

Zachary R. Adam; Albert C. Fahrenbach; Betul Kacar; Masashi Aono

The tractable history of life records a successive emergence of organisms composed of hierarchically organized cells and greater degrees of individuation. The lowermost object level of this hierarchy is the cell, but it is unclear whether the organizational attributes of living systems extended backward through prebiotic stages of chemical evolution. If the systems biology attributes of the cell were indeed templated upon prebiotic synthetic relationships between subcellular objects, it is not obvious how to categorize object levels below the cell in ways that capture any hierarchies which may have preceded living systems. In this paper, we map out stratified relationships between physical components that drive the production of key prebiotic molecules starting from radiolysis of a small number of abundant molecular species. Connectivity across multiple levels imparts the potential to create and maintain far-from-equilibrium chemical conditions and to manifest nonlinear system behaviors best approximated using automata formalisms. The architectural attribute of “information hiding” of energy exchange processes at each object level is shared with stable, multitiered automata such as digital computers. These attributes may indicate a profound connection between the system complexity afforded by energy dissipation by subatomic level objects and the emergence of complex automata that could have preceded biological systems.


Chemical Communications | 2018

Synthesis of imidazole-activated ribonucleotides using cyanogen chloride

Ruiqin Yi; Yayoi Hongo; Albert C. Fahrenbach


Chemical Communications | 2018

Solvated-electron production using cyanocuprates is compatible with the UV-environment on a Hadean–Archaean Earth

Zoe R. Todd; Albert C. Fahrenbach; Christopher J. Magnani; Sukrit Ranjan; Anders Björkbom; Jack W. Szostak; Dimitar D. Sasselov


ChemistrySelect | 2018

Radiolytic Synthesis of Cyanogen Chloride, Cyanamide and Simple Sugar Precursors

Ruiqin Yi; Yayoi Hongo; Isao Yoda; Zachary R. Adam; Albert C. Fahrenbach


239th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Redox-active reverse donor-acceptor bistable [2]rotaxane (ORGN 539)

Sanjeev K. Dey; Albert C. Fahrenbach; Ali Coskun; James Fraser Stoddart

Collaboration


Dive into the Albert C. Fahrenbach's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yayoi Hongo

Tokyo Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Masashi Aono

Tokyo Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ruiqin Yi

Tokyo Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Isao Yoda

Tokyo Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge