Title: Early Earth and the Origin of Life
1Early Earth and the Origin of Life
2Study of the Origin of Life is Speculative
- No fossil evidence of lifes origin exists.
3Still, origin of life is thought to have occurred
through 4 main stages
- Abiotic synthesis of small organic molecules
(monomers) - Amino acids
- nucleotides
4Still, origin of life is thought to have occurred
through 4 main stages
- Joining of monomers into polymers
- Proteins
- Nucleic acids
5Still, origin of life is thought to have occurred
through 4 main stages
- Packaging of polymers into protobionts
- Droplets with membranes that maintained an
internal chemistry different from that of their
surroundings.
6Still, origin of life is thought to have occurred
through 4 main stages
- Origin of self-replicating molecules that
eventually made inheritance possible.
7When Did Life on Earth Arise?
- Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago.
- First evidence of life on Earth is found in rocks
that are 3.8 billion years old.
8Earliest Earth
- No seas
- Collisions of rocks in formation of the Earth
generated to much heat - Water would have vaporized
9Likely atmosphere of early Earth
- Thick with water vapor
- Compounds released by volcanic eruption
- Nitrogen and its oxides
- Carbon dioxide
- Methane
- Ammonia
- Hydrogen
- Hydrogen sulfide
- Notably missing - OXYGEN
10So, What Was Early Earth Like?
- Obviously, atmosphere different little O2
present - Lots more volcanic activity
- Lots more lightening
- Static from eruption particles
- Meteorite bombardment
- More intense UV radiation from the sun
- Such conditions might have not only made
formation of life from nonlife possibleit might
have been inevitable.
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12As Earth cooled
- Water vapor condensed into oceans
- Much hydrogen escaped into space
13What Was the Origin of the First Cells?
- Most biologists subscribe to the hypothesis that
life on Earth developed from nonliving materials. - These nonliving materials became ordered into
molecular aggregates that eventually became
capable of both replication and metabolism.
14Doesnt the Cell Theory Say that Life Cannot Come
from Nonliving Things????
- YES! Certainly that is true today.
- Conditions on early Earth were much different
from what they are today and MAY have been
conducive to the formation of living things from
nonliving materials.
15Oparin and Haldane
- 1920s
- Hypothesized that conditions on primitive Earth
favored chemical reactions that synthesized
organic compounds from inorganic precursors. - This idea is often called chemical evolution.
16Oparin and Haldane
- Why dont we see such chemical evolution
occurring today? - Oparin and Haldane said this was because the
oxygen rich atmosphere we have today is not
conducive to spontaneous synthesis of complex
molecules. - Oxygen in atmosphere attacks chemical bonds
(oxydizying) - Before photosynthesis, the Earth had a much less
oxidizing atmosphere derived mainly from volcanic
vapors a reducing atmosphere.
17Oparin and Haldane
- Whats so great about a reducing atmosphere?
- reducing also means electron adding
- Would have enhanced the joining of simple
molecules to form more complex ones.
18Oparin and Haldane
- Still, even with a reducing atmosphere, making
organic compounds would require lots of energy
(think photosynthesis) - Oparin and Haldane said this could have been
provided by the intense lightening and UV
radiation that was abundant in the early Earths
atmosphere. - There was no protective ozone layer in early
EarthOzone is made from oxygen and there wasnt
much.
19Testing the Oparin-Haldane Hypothesis Miller
and Urey
- 1953
- Tested the Oparin-Haldane hypothesis
- Created conditions in the lab that were
comparable to those of early Earth. - Goal was to see if amino acids and/or other
organic monomers would spontaneously form from
inorganic compounds.
20Miller and Ureys Experiment
- Atmosphere water, hydrogen gas methane and
ammonia - to mimic early Earth. - A warmed flask of water simulated the primeval
sea. - Energy was provided by sparks that mimicked
lightening. - A condenser cooled the atmosphere and allowed
water to rain back into a flask for testing. - After a week the water became murky brown and was
tested for organic compounds. - Learn MORE Click HERE!
21Results of Miller and Ureys Experiment
- Their apparatus produced a variety of amino acids
and other organic compounds found in living
organisms today.
22HOWEVER
- Scientists now think that the early Earths
atmosphere was probably not as reducing as the
atmosphere in the Miller-Urey experiment. - More evidence today suggests that nitrogen and
carbon dioxide were primary components of
atmosphere not reducing (or even oxidizing) - Experiments have NOT been able to produce organic
monomers in such an atmosphere
23Where else could life have originated?
- Pockets where reducing atmosphere may have
existed near volcanoes - Deep sea vents
24Extraterrestrial origin of organic compounds?
- Organic monomers have been found in meteorites
that strike Earth - Carbonaceous chondrites
- 80 amino acids found in one
25Life Elsewhere?
- Mars
- Europa
- One of Jupiters moons
- Outside our solar system?
26What about the Polymers?
- Miller and Urey suggested that organic monomers
could form spontaneously from inorganic compounds - Could organic polymers form spontaneously from
these organic monomers? - Remember that there would have been no enzymes to
help these chemicals come together (DNA
Polymerase, for example)
27Experiments on Abiotic Synthesis of Organic
Polymers (DNA, Proteins)
- Dilute solutions of organic monomers dripped onto
hot sand, clay or rock. - This process vaporizes water and concentrates the
monomers on the sand/clay/rock. - Results Polymerization occurs
- Clay (and some other materials) might have been
important in bringing together organic monomers
to make polymers due to its chemical nature. - They are not like the proteins we have today, but
could have served as a weak catalyst for early
chemical reactions.
28So now weve got polymers Whats Next?
- Protobionts
- Aggregates of abiotically produced molecules
surrounded by a membrane or membrane-like
structure - Made of mostly hydrophobic molecules surrounded
by a shell of water molecules. - Precursors of actual living cells?
29Properties of Protobionts that are associated
with life
- SIMPLE reproduction
- Maintain an internal chemical environment
DIFFERENT from their surroundings - Exhibit SOME qualities of life such as metabolism
30What experiments tell us
- Protobionts COULD have formed spontaneously from
organic compounds. - Example Liposomes
31Liposomes
- Membrane-bounded droplets that form spontaneously
when lipids or other organic molecules are added
to water - Hydrophobic molecules organize into a bilayer at
the surface of the droplet Like a bilayer cell
membrane. - Liposome bilayer selectively permeable
- Therefore, liposomes can undergo swellling or
shrinking due to osmosis - Some can even discharge energy across their
membranes like a nerve cell can.
32Next step is to achieve heredity
- First genetic material was likely RNA
- WHY?
33We know that RNA has multiple functions
- Of course, it has a central role in protein
synthesis - mRNA, tRNA, rRNA, etc.
- But, RNA can ALSO act as a catalyst
- Ribozymes
- Catalytic capability may have been critical early
on. Allowed RNA molecules to perhaps catalyze
their OWN REPLICATION!! - Something that the more stable DNA molecule could
probably NOT do.
34What do experiments tell us?
- Natural selection can be observed acting on RNA
molecules in the labHow? - RNA molecules fold and make unique shapes based
on their nucleotide sequences NOT like uniform
structure of DNA - RNA molecules with certain shapes are more
adapted to certain environments than other RNA
molecules - These will reproduce most often, but will not
give a single RNA species due to mutational
changes - RNA is less stable than DNA
- Natural selection will further screen these
offspring molecules such that only those best
suited for the environment will survive
35An RNA World
- The DNA world of today may have been preceded by
an RNA world in which small RNA molecules
carrying genetic information were able to
replicate and store information about the
protobionts that carried them
36Once RNA was established, further changes were
possible
- RNA could have provided the template on which DNA
molecules were assembled.
37But why bother to have DNA if RNA works?
- DNA is a much more stable molecule.
- Once DNA appeared, RNA molecules would have begun
to take on their modern roles as intermediates
between DNA and protein.
38History of Life
- Two Eons
- Precambrian
- Oldest
- By FAR, the greatest amount of time
- Least detail least diversity of life
- Phanerozoic
- More recent
- Less time than Precambrian
- LOTS of life
39History of Life
- Phanerozoic Eon made up of 3 eras
- Paleozoic
- More ancient
- Mesozoic
- Middle life
- Age of reptiles
- Cenozoic
- More recent
- Age of mammals
- MASS EXTINCTIONS separate each of the 3 eras
40Mass Extinctions
- At the end of the Paleozoic Era (Permian Period)
- Wiped out 96 of marine animal species Many land
species also affected (70) - Occurred over a period less than 5 million years
which is an instant in terms of geologic time - Cause enormous volcanic eruptions in what is
now Siberia - Eruptions may have produced enough carbon dioxide
to warm the global climatesound familiar?? - Reduced temperature differences between poles and
equator reduce ocean water mixing. - This affects oxygen available in oceans for life
41The Permian Mass Extinction
- Click HERE for an article on this mass extinction
from Scientific American
42Mass Extinctions
- At the end of the Mesozoic era (Cretaceous
period) 65 mya - Evidence suggests asteroid or large comet
collided with Earth - Layer of iridium in rocks at 65 mya
- Not commonly found on Earth, but very commonly
found in meteorites, etc. - Cloud raised from the hit would have blocked
sunlight and disturbed global climate for months
43Cretaceous Extinction
- Is there evidence for a strike?
- Yes. Chicxulub crater
- Off coast of Yucatan peninsula Mexico
- Right age, right size
- Object that caused this would have been about 10
km in diameter. - Also evidence for a spike in volcanism at this
timeis it due to the Chixulub impact?
44Cretaceous Extinction
45Chixulub Crater
46What are Stromatolites?
- Banded domes of sedimentary rock
- Made of bacteria and sediment
- Very similar to layered mats formed today in salt
marshes by colonies of bacteria. - These are currently the oldest known fossils of
living organisms. - 3.5 by old
- Life is probably older3.9 by
47Stromatolites
48Present day stromatolite formation
49First life
50Two major branches of prokaryotes arose early on
- Bacteria
- Archaea
- Both these lineages still thrive today
- These are at the DOMAIN level of classification
51The first prokaryotes
- Arose from the most successful protobiontsones
that could - Produce all their needed compounds from molecules
in their environment - These most successful protobionts diverseified
into a rich variety - Autotrophs
- Autotrophs probably led to emergence of
heterotrophs - These could have lived on products excreted by
autotrophs - OR on autotrophs themselves
- These autotrophs and heterotrophs were the first
prokaryotes - Prokaryotes were the sole inhabitants of Earth
for a VERY LONG time 3.5 by ago to 2 by ago.
52Significance of Electron Transport Chains
- Common to all three domains
- Strong evidence that this electron transport
mechanism originated in organisms that lived
BEFORE the last common ancestor of all present
day life.
53How did living things alter the Earth?
- Oxygen
- Cyanobacteria only living prokaryotes to
generate oxygen by photosynthesis - When the first bacteria began to make oxygen
- Seas and lakes first had to get saturated
- Then dissolved iron became oxidized and
precipitated out. We see this as bands of rust
in sedimentary rock layers - Once all iron oxide had precipitated, then the
oxygen finally began to gas out of seas and
enter the atmosphere - This change is seen in rust of terrestrial rocks
at about 2.7 by ago
54Effects of the Oxygen Revolution on Life
- Doomed many prokaryotic groups
- The first mass extinction?
- Some prokaryotes survived in habitats that are
still anaerobic today. - Other survivors evolved a diversity of
adaptations to the new atmosphere - Cellular respiration
55What about Eukaryotes?
- Oldest eukaryotic fossils
- Date to 2.1 by ago
- Remember
- prokaryotes lack organelles
- where did these come from?
56What led to organelles like mitochondria and
chloroplasts?
- Endosymbiosis
- Mitochondria and plastids were formerly small
prokaryotes living within larger cells - Ancestors of mitochondria
- Aerobic heterotrophic prokaryotes
- Ancestors of plastids (chloroplasts)
- Photosynthetic prokaryotes
57How did the endosymbionts get in?
- Undigested prey of the host OR
- Parasite of the host
- Either suggests an earlier evolution in the host
of - endomembrane system
- Cytoskeleton
- Only these organelles would have made it possible
for the host to - engulf the smaller cells
- package them within vesicles.
58What would be gained by the participants in the
symbiosis?
- Host
- Use nutrients released from photosynthetic
endosymbionts - An anaerobic host could benefit from harboring an
aerobic endosymbiont that could make use of the
oxygen in the environment - Endosymbiont
- protection
59Serial Endosymbiosis
- Since ALL cells have mitochondria, but NOT all
cells have chloroplasts, it is hypothesized that
mitochondria evolved first. - Serial endosymbiosis a series of endosymbiotic
steps
60Evidence for Endosymbiosis
- Overwhelming
- Double membrane
- Inner membrane (endosymbionts membrane) has
membrane proteins homologous to other prokaryotes - Mitochondria and chloroplasts each have their own
DNA that is a single circular DNA molecule like
bacteria - Contain RNA, ribosomes, etc. needed to
transcribe/translate DNA into protein - Ribosomes are more like prokartyotic ribosomes
than eukaryotic ribosomes
61Determining very ancient lineages
- Nucleotide sequence of the RNA of the small
ribosomal subunit. - It is present in all organisms, thus it can be
used to study the deepest branches of the tree of
life
62Endosymbiont genes
- Over time some of the genes of the endosymbionts
were transferred to the nucleus - Transposable elements may have been responsible
- Eukaryotic cells have one genome, but it is
complemented by the genes that remain in the
mitochondria and/or chloroplasts
63What about other organelles?
- Golgi apparatus and ER may have originated from
infoldings of the plasma membrane of a prokaryote
64Example of a complex symbiosis
- Mixotricha paradoxa
- Protist
- Lives inside gut of termites digests wood
- 3 types of bacteria attached to surface to
provide motility - 4th type lives inside the protist to digest wood
65Evolution of Multicellular Eukaryotes
- Common ancestor of the multicellular eukartote
dated to 1.5 by ago
66Multicellular eukaryotes relatively limited in
size, diversity, distribution until fairly
latewhy?
- Snowball Earth hypothesis
- Glaciers covered the planets landmasses from
pole to pole - Life confined to areas of deep sea vents, etc.
- Fossil record of first major burst of
multicellular life occurs at the time when
snowball Earth thawed.
67Multicellularity and colonies
- 1st multicellular organisms were colonies
- Colony collections of autonomously replicating
cells - Cells that each reproduce on their own but agree
to hang out together - Eventually some cells in some colonies became
specialized for some particular function - Division of function led to tissues, organs,
organ systems
68Multicellularity evolved several times among
early eukaryotes
- This led to the rise of several multicellular
eukaryotic lineages - Plants
- Fungi
- Animals
- Also some multicellular algae
69The Cambrian Explosion
- Time when most of the major phyla of animals
appear in the fossil record
70Movement to Land from Water
- Involved adaptations to
- Prevent dehydration
- Reproduce on land
71Land organisms
- Plants and symbiosis with fungi
- Widespread and diverse land animals are
arthropods - Humans did not diverge from other hominids until
about 6-7 my ago
72Organizing The Tree of Life
- 2 kingdom system
- 1969 5 kingdom system
- Recognizes 2 cell types
- Prokaryote and eukaryote
- 5 kingdoms are
- Monera
- Protista
- Fungi
- Plantae
- Animalia
733 kingdoms of multicellular eukaryotes
- Fungi, Plantae, Animalia
- How were these divided?
- Nutrition
- Plants autotrophs
- Fungi and animals heterotrophs
- Fungi decomposers
- Animals ingest and digest w/i a body cavity
74Kingdom Protista
- Not so great
- All eukartyotes that did not fit the definitions
of plants, fungi or animals
753 Domain System
- superkingdoms higher than the kingdom level
- Bacteria, Archea, Eukarya
- Though both prokaryotic, bacteria and archea
differ in many significant ways - 3 domains makes monera kingdom obsolete
- Protists have been divided into 5 or more new
kingdoms
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