Comparative Analysis of RNA Families Reveals Distinct Repertoires for Each Domain of Life
Marc P. Hoeppner, Paul P. Gardner, Anthony M. Poole

TL;DR
This study systematically analyzes RNA family distributions across domains of life, revealing mostly domain-specific repertoires with limited evidence of ancient continuity, challenging the idea of a universal RNA world.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive comparative genomic analysis of RNA families across domains, demonstrating mostly domain-specific evolution and limited ancient RNA continuity.
Findings
99% of RNA families are domain-specific
Over half of cross-domain RNA families show horizontal transfer
Most RNA repertoires evolved independently in each domain
Abstract
The RNA world hypothesis, that RNA genomes and catalysts preceded DNA genomes and genetically-encoded protein catalysts, has been central to models for the early evolution of life on Earth. A key part of such models is continuity between the earliest stages in the evolution of life and the RNA repertoires of extant lineages. Some assessments seem consistent with a diverse RNA world, yet direct continuity between modern RNAs and an RNA world has not been demonstrated for the majority of RNA families, and, anecdotally, many RNA functions appear restricted in their distribution. Despite much discussion of the possible antiquity of RNA families, no systematic analyses of RNA family distribution have been performed. To chart the broad evolutionary history of known RNA families, we performed comparative genomic analysis of over 3 million RNA annotations spanning 1446 families from the Rfam 10…
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