The selfish ribosome
Populations and Evolution
2026-03-03 v2
Abstract
The ribosome is responsible for protein synthesis in all cells, and is the largest energy consumer in the cell. We propose that the ribosome originated as a mutualistic symbiont of an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase ribozyme, supplying peptides that enhanced replication. As life transitioned from the RNA to the RNA-protein world, autonomous replicators became irreversibly addicted to the ribosome for producing replication proteins. Subsequent evolution is construed as a ribosomal takeover, whereby the ribosome evolved to consume most of the resources of the cell, while other cellular componentry ensured the propagation of the ribosome. Under this perspective, the ribosome is the ultimate biological selfish element.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2602.23268,
title = {The selfish ribosome},
author = {Mart Krupovic and Eugene V. Koonin},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2602.23268},
year = {2026}
}
Comments
16 pages, 2 figures