Context:
A breakthrough study published in Science reveals that certain Antarctic and gut-dwelling archaea have reprogrammed the universal genetic code, using the TAG codon—normally a stop signal—to encode a rare amino acid, pyrrolysine (Pyl). This discovery fundamentally reshapes understanding of protein synthesis, genetic code universality, and bioengineering potential.
Key Highlights:
- Discovery of a New Genetic Code
- In the standard genetic code, 64 codons exist:
- 61 sense codons encode 20 common amino acids
- 3 codons (TAG, TAA, TGA) act as stop signals
- The study identifies a new ‘Pyl code’ with:
- 62 sense codons
- 21 amino acids, including pyrrolysine (Pyl)
- Repurposing of TAG Codon
- In nine archaeal species, the TAG codon is fully reassigned to encode Pyl, not termination.
- Notable organisms include:
- Methanococcoides burtonii (Antarctic lake archaea)
- Methanomethylophilus alvi (human gut archaea)
- Experimental Validation
- Scientists successfully engineered Escherichia coli to:
- Express archaeal translation machinery
- Correctly read TAG as pyrrolysine
- Confirms the functional viability of the Pyl code.
- Rethinking Protein Prediction
- For these archaea, all TAG codons must be read as coding for Pyl.
- Existing genome annotation tools may misinterpret proteins unless this reassignment is accounted for.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Codon: A triplet of nucleotides specifying an amino acid or stop signal.
- Pyrrolysine (Pyl): A rare, genetically encoded amino acid found mainly in methanogenic archaea.
- Archaea: A distinct domain of life with unique genetic and biochemical traits.
- Genetic code is nearly universal, but exceptions exist (e.g., mitochondria, some microbes).
Relevant Mains Points:
- Challenges the long-held notion of genetic code universality.
- Highlights evolutionary flexibility in translation mechanisms.
- Impacts genomics, evolutionary biology, and synthetic biology.
- Demonstrates how extremophiles adapt molecular systems for survival.
- Way Forward
- Update bioinformatics tools to correctly interpret non-standard genetic codes.
- Explore whether Pyl provides fitness advantages in extreme environments.
- Leverage the Pyl code for precision protein engineering and novel biomaterials.
- Expand research into alternative genetic codes across life forms.
UPSC Relevance:
GS Paper III – Science & Technology
Prelims – Genetics, Biotechnology
