Dory wrote:Until it is degraded, it is free to be recycled...
Why would it be degraded? Why does the cell care if it floats around in its cytoplasm? It's not like it's getting rusty or anything.
There would be an advantage for any cell that can break down complex polymers into monomers which can be used to make polymers again as the situation demands, suppose you need nucleotides for replication, it would make sense to obtain nucleotides from now superfluous polymers to do the same. The idea for metabolic efficiency is being able to synthesize as much as you need while minimizing external intake, which again would have evolutionary advantages as in some degree of independence from external food sources. Any metabolic configuration that evolves and ends up with the above features will give its bearers an evolutionary advantage.
That is one reason, secondly, I'd like to bring this up...
From the earliest comparisons of RNA production with steady-state levels, it has been clear that cells transcribe more RNA than they accumulate, implying the existence of active RNA degradation systems. In general, RNA is degraded at the end of its useful life, which is long for a ribosomal RNA but very short for excised introns or spacer fragments, and is closely regulated for most mRNA species. RNA molecules with defects in processing, folding, or assembly with proteins are identified and rapidly degraded by the surveillance machinery. Because RNA degradation is ubiquitous in all cells, it is clear that it must be carefully controlled to accurately recognize target RNAs. How this is achieved is perhaps the most pressing question in the field.
Again this would have advantages in recycling now superfluous polymers to raw material for further anabolism.
http://www.cell.com/abstract/S0092-8674%2809%2900067-1
I will try to procure a copy of the paper from a friend.