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by t_serpico
1068 days ago
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How have I missed the point? The answer that nature cannot engineer and can't start de novo are trivially true statements that provide no actual insight into the question. I fully agree the original question itself is a deep one. A quick literature search is more productive than pontificating with weak analogies. See https://www.math.unl.edu/~bdeng1/Papers/DengDNAreplication.p... for what seems to be an interesting analysis regarding base number and DNA replication rate. |
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Mind elaborating on that?
Because there is no biochemical reason why DNA could not have incorporated, say, a third pairing pair, so while base-3 (which I don't specifically mention in my post btw.) wouldn't work, base 6 or 8 would have been possible. "Unnatural Base Pairs" are even known to work in laboratory settings.
There is also no biochemical reason why base2 life wouldn't work. Expand the reading frame of the translation machinery to 5 instead of three, and you have enough coding space for polypeptides.
My answer adresses the question completely, because the only reason behind these "decisions" is an ancient system that simply got "frozen", and now cannot change any more.