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The maintenance of the accuracy of protein synthesis and its relevance to ageing: a correction.

Leslie E. Orgel
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 67, Iss: 3, pp 1476-1476
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TLDR
A simpler model is considered in which successive generations of the protein-synthetic apparatus are discrete and distinguishable, and it is deduced that the error frequency would increase exponentially.
Abstract
An argument1 purporting to show that the accuracy of protein synthesis would deteriorate in the absence of cellular selection, thus leading to an "error catastrophe," contains a hidden assumption that no longer seems justified. I supposed that the error frequency in protein synthesis could be approximated as the sum of a residual error frequency (applicable where the protein-synthetic apparatus contains no errors) and a term dependent linearly on the number of errors already present in the protein-synthetic apparatus. I deduced that the error frequency would increase exponentially. To clarify the nature of the hidden assumption I now consider a simpler model in which successive generations of the protein-synthetic apparatus are discrete and distinguishable. Let c, be the error frequency in the nth generation, R the residual error frequency, and a the proportionality constant between errors in the synthetic apparatus and errors in freshly synthesized protein. Then

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