Mark Dörr
University of Southern Denmark
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mark Dörr.
ChemBioChem | 2013
Rafal Wieczorek; Mark Dörr; Agata Chotera; Pier Luigi Luisi; Pierre-Alain Monnard
A new scenario for prebiotic formation of nucleic acid oligomers is presented. Peptide catalysis is applied to achieve condensation of activated RNA monomers into short RNA chains. As catalysts, L‐dipeptides containing a histidine residue, primarily Ser‐His, were used. Reactions were carried out in selforganised environment, a water‐ice eutectic phase, with low concentrations of reactants. Incubation periods up to 30 days resulted in the formation of short oligomers of RNA. During the oligomerisation, an active intermediate (dipeptide–mononucleotide) is produced, which is the reactive species. Details of the mechanism and kinetics, which were elucidated with a set of control experiments, further establish that the imidazole side chain of a histidine at the carboxyl end of the dipeptide plays a crucial role in the catalysis. These results suggest that this oligomerisation catalysis occurs by a transamination mechanism. Because peptides are much more likely products of spontaneous condensation than nucleotide chains, their potential as catalysts for the formation of RNA is interesting from the origin‐of‐life perspective. Finally, the formation of the dipeptide–mononucleotide intermediate and its significance for catalysis might also be viewed as the tell‐tale signs of a new example of organocatalysis.
ChemPhysChem | 2011
Sarah Elisabeth Maurer; Michael S. DeClue; Anders N. Albertsen; Mark Dörr; David S. Kuiper; Hans Ziock; Steen Rasmussen; James M. Boncella; Pierre-Alain Monnard
One of the essential elements of any cell, including primitive ancestors, is a structural component that protects and confines the metabolism and genes while allowing access to essential nutrients. For the targeted protocell model, bilayers of decanoic acid, a single-chain fatty acid amphiphile, are used as the container. These bilayers interact with a ruthenium-nucleobase complex, the metabolic complex, to convert amphiphile precursors into more amphiphiles. These interactions are dependent on non-covalent bonding. The initial rate of conversion of an oily precursor molecule into fatty acid was examined as a function of these interactions. It is shown that the precursor molecule associates strongly with decanoic acid structures. This results in a high dependence of conversion rates on the interaction of the catalyst with the self-assembled structures. The observed rate logically increases when a tight interaction between catalyst complex and container exists. A strong association between the metabolic complex and the container was achieved by bonding a sufficiently long hydrocarbon tail to the complex. Surprisingly, the rate enhancement was nearly as strong when the ruthenium and nucleobase elements of the complex were each given their own hydrocarbon tail and existed as separate molecules, as when the two elements were covalently bonded to each other and the resulting molecule was given a hydrocarbon tail. These results provide insights into the possibilities and constraints of such a reaction system in relation to building the ultimate protocell.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Philipp M. G. Löffler; Joost Groen; Mark Dörr; Pierre-Alain Monnard
Template-directed polymerization of RNA in the absence of enzymes is the basis for an information transfer in the ‘RNA-world’ hypothesis and in novel nucleic acid based technology. Previous investigations established that only cytidine rich strands are efficient templates in bulk aqueous solutions while a few specific sequences completely block the extension of hybridized primers. We show that a eutectic water/ice system can support Pb2+/Mg2+-ion catalyzed extension of a primer across such sequences, i.e. AA, AU and AG, in a one-pot synthesis. Using mixtures of imidazole activated nucleotide 5′-monophosphates, the two first “blocking” residues could be passed during template-directed polymerization, i.e., formation of triply extended products containing a high fraction of faithful copies was demonstrated. Across the AG sequence, a mismatch sequence was formed in similar amounts to the correct product due to U·G wobble pairing. Thus, the template-directed extension occurs both across pyrimidine and purine rich sequences and insertions of pyrimidines did not inhibit the subsequent insertions. Products were mainly formed with 2′-5′-phosphodiester linkages, however, the abundance of 3′–5′-linkages was higher than previously reported for pyrimidine insertions. When enzyme-free, template-directed RNA polymerization is performed in a eutectic water ice environment, various intrinsic reaction limitations observed in bulk solution can then be overcome.
Current Organic Synthesis | 2012
Mark Dörr; Philipp M. G. Löffler; Pierre-Alain Monnard
Artificial Life | 2010
Mark Dörr; Philipp M. G. Löffler; Pierre-Alain Monnard
ChemBioChem | 2013
Rafal Wieczorek; Mark Dörr; Agata Chotera; Pier Luigi Luisi; Pierre-Alain Monnard
Origin of Life: Gordon Research Conference | 2012
Rafal Wieczorek; Mark Dörr; Pier Luigi Luisi; Pierre-Alain Monnard
ALife XIII: Evolution in action | 2012
Mark Dörr; Sif Schmidt-Petersen; Harold Fellermann; Lone Laursen; Steen Rasmussen
european conference on artificial life | 2011
Steen Rasmussen; Pierre-Alain Monnard; Martin M. Hanczyc; Anders N. Albertsen; James M. Boncella; Eva Bönzli; Filippo Caschera; Mark Dörr; Harold Fellermann; Maik Hadorn; Wendie Jørgensen; Philipp M. G. Löffler; Sarah Elizabeth Maurer; Kent A. Nielsen; Pernille Lykke Pedersen; Carsten Svaneborg; Michael Chr. Wamberg; Rafal Wieczorek; Hans Ziock
Archive | 2011
Steen Rasmussen; Pierre-Alain Monnard; Martin M. Hanczyc; Anders N. Albertsen; Eva Bönzli; Filippo Caschera; Mark Dörr; Harold Fellermann; Wendie Jørgensen; Philipp M. G. Löffler; Sarah Elisabeth Maurer; Kent A. Nielsen; Pernille Lykke Pedersen; Carsten Svaneborg; Michael Chr. Wamberg; Rafal Wieczorek