Title: Origin of Life
1Origin of Life
2- What is Life?
- Life resists a simple, one-sentence definition
because it is associated with numerous emergent
properties - properties that emerge as a result
of interactions between components - But, we can recognize life without defining it,
by recognizing its properties - Order
- Reproduction
- Growth and Development
- Energy Utilization
- Response to the Environment
- Homeostasis
- Evolutionary Adaptation
3- When did life arise on Earth?
- The Earth is thought to be approximately 4.6
billion years old, but life is believed to have
occurred approximately 4 billion years ago (bya)
4- What were the conditions like on Earth when life
arose? - Up to about 4 bya, asteroid impacts and volcanic
eruptions resulted in the release of various
gases that began to form an atmosphere - It consisted mainly of CO2, with some nitrogen,
water vapor and sulfur gases hydrogen quickly
escaped into space - CO2 in the atmosphere trapped solar radiation,
making the Earths surface rather warm - Earth was cool enough to form a crust, and water
vapor condensed to form oceans - Oceans in turn helped to dissolve CO2 from the
atmosphere and deposit it into carbonate rocks on
the seafloor -
5- What were the conditions like on Earth when life
arose? cont. - Organic molecules were undoubtedly being formed
on the Earths surface - Lightening and ultraviolet radiation from the
Sun acted on the atmosphere to forms small traces
of many different gases, including ammonia (NH3),
methane (CH4), carbon monoxide (CO) and ethane - Also, cyanide (HCN) probably formed easily in
the upper atmosphere, from solar radiation and
then dissolved in raindrops
6What is the simplest living cell that one can
imagine?
- A universal minimal cell must contain the
following - Cell membrane
- Cytoplasm
- DNA and RNA
- Proteins
- Enzymes
- Ribozymes
7- Conditions that are necessary if life is to
evolve from non-life - Energy energy to form complex organic
molecules - Protection continued energy input will destroy
complex organic molecules that form in reactions
they must, therefore, be protected after they are
formed - Concentration Chemical reactions run better at
high concentrations, but most reactions give
rather low yields - Catalysis All reactions inside our cells are
aided by the necessary activity of enzymes
8Where did the basic building blocks come from?
- Miller-Urey Experiment
- A mixture of methane, ammonia, water vapor, and
hydrogen was circulated through a liquid water
solution and continuously sparked by a corona
discharge elsewhere in the apparatus. - After several days of exposure to sparking, the
solution changed color. - Subsequent analysis indicated that several amino
and hydroxy acids had been produced by this
simple procedure. -
9- Additional experimental evidence
- Carl Sagan, and his colleagues made amino acids
by long wavelength ultraviolet irradiation of a
mixture of methane, ammonia, water, and H2S. - It is quite remarkable that amino acids can be
made so readily under simulated primitive
conditions. - However, when laboratory conditions become
oxidizing, no amino acids are formed, suggesting
that reducing conditions were necessary for
prebiological organic synthesis.
10- Extraterrestrial delivery
- Comets and some meteorites are rich in amino
acids, sugars, and fatty acids. - However, the survival of organic matter during
large impacts may be small. - Interplanetary dust particles can have the same
composition about 10,000 tons of dust falls to
Earth every year. - Hydrothermal Vents
- On the sea floor, where new ocean crust is
forming, hot mineral-rich water is venting into
the ocean many fresh mineral surfaces occur in
these vents. - These surfaces catalyze the conversion of carbon
dioxide and nitrogen gas to methane and ammonia,
which are good ingredients from which to make the
basic building blocks.
11Is it possible to simulate the production of
early organic polymers?
- The Dilemma Organic polymers such as proteins
are synthesized by dehydration reactions
(condensation) that remove hydrogen and hydroxyl
(-OH) groups from the monomers, forming water as
a by-product - Also, enzymes within the cell are responsible
for catalyzing these kinds of reactions
- Abiotic synthesis of polymers on the early Earth
would have had to occur without the help of these
enzymes - Moreover, the monomers would have been present
in dilute concentrations, making spontaneous
condensation reactions rather unlikely
12- Potential Solutions
- Polymerization has been demonstrated in lab
experiments when dilute solutions of organic
monomers are dripped onto hot rocks - The process appears to vaporize water and
concentrate the monomers on the substrate - On the early Earth, waves or rain may have
splashed dilute solutions of organic monomers
onto hot rocks and subsequently rinsed polymers
back into the water - Clay may have served as a substratum for the
polymerization of monomers - Various monomers bind to charged sites on clay
particles clay may have concentrated various
organic monomers present in dilute solutions - At some of the binding sites, metal atoms, such
as iron and zinc, function as catalysts
facilitating the reactions that link monomers
13The formation of an early cell
- Review
- Cells exist in a watery world.
- A water molecule can behave as if charged
because of its polar structure. - This polar structure is the basis for an
interesting relationship between water molecules
and lipids
14- The lipids charged polar head (hydrophyllic)
can form a weak bond with a water molecule, but
the uncharged, nonpolar tail (hydrophobic)
cannot.
- In a membrane, lipids are usually arranged in
sheets made of two layers, with the lipids in
each layer pointing in opposite directions. - The water-loving heads contact water both inside
and outside the cell, while the water- loathing
tails stay tucked safely within the walls oily
interior. - Arranged this way, lipids make surprisingly good
barriers.
15The Formation and Significance of Liposomes
- When Alex Bangham (circa 1960) extracted lipids
from egg yolks and threw them into water, he
found that the lipids would naturally organize
themselves into double-layered bubbles roughly
the size of a cell these bubbles became known as
liposomes. - This discovery led Bangham and Deamer to
speculate that liposomes may have predated
life.and may have provided lifes first shelter
16- Deamer took mixtures of fatty acids, glycerol,
and phosphates and found that in the right
concentrations they formed into lipids, and in
turn, the lipids spontaneously assembled into
liposomes. - Question How could macromolecules have gotten
inside them? - Deamer extracted lipids from egg yolk, and mixed
some of it into a small test tube of water - He then extracted a few drops from the mixture
and put them on a glass slide. - To this he added a some fluorescently stained
DNA - The slide on a hot plate to simulate primordial
tide pool after a few minutes, the lipids and
DNA on the slide dried into a thin film. - Deamer later added a few drops of water and put
it under a fluorescent microscope - He noticed the lipids swelled into bubbles some
containing fluorescent DNA - Provided proof that as the planes of lipids
curled up into vesicles, the DNA that had been
sandwiched in between them got trapped inside.
17- An Extraterrestrial Solution?
- Deamer also wondered whether outerspace could
have supplied early membranes - He examined a 200-pound meteorite that had
fallen in Murchison, Australia, with the interest
in determining whether there were any things in
the meteor that form bilayers? - Deamer ground a piece of the Murchison meteorite
and extracted the organic carbon, made it into a
slurry, dried it, and then added water again. - He took the extract and put it on a slide and
noticed that the whole slide began to fill with
little vesicles.
18- Early Sources of Cellular Energy
- Meteorites are comprised of a group of chemicals
named polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)
that are made of hexagons of carbon and hydrogen
atoms linked in various arrangements.
- PAHs may have made life possible on early Earth
because the give off electrons when exposed to
light - These electrons could have supplied energy to
early cells.
19Question How did the early organic molecules and
other biological molecules become
self-replicating and self-regulating?
20The Central Dogma A Brief Review
- DNA is replicated when cells divide and when sex
cells are formed. - Genes are transcribed to produce single strands
of RNA - RNA (messenger RNA) provides the template from
which protein synthesis is carried out. - Strands of messenger RNA are translated to
produce a sequence of amino acids (protein).
- Which came first, DNA, RNA or protein?
21The First Genetic Material The RNA World
Hypothesis
- The Idea Primitive RNA molecules may have
assembled themselves randomly from building
blocks in the primordial ooze and performed
simple chemical chores. - The Evidence In the early 1980's, Sidney Altman
and Thomas Cech, discovered a kind of RNA - a
ribozyme - that could edit out unnecessary parts
of the message it carried before delivering it to
the ribosome. - Long before there were enzymes or DNA, RNA
molecules may have been capable of
self-replication -
- But skeptics argued that an RNA's being able to
cleave itself was all well and good, but what
about all the other chemical reactions that But
could RNA serve as the sole information molecule
and enzyme of early cells?
22- RNA and Translation
- Harry Noller attempted to map ribosomes and
figure out which of its proteins were responsible
for translation of mRNA. - He treated the ribosomes with protein-digesting
enzymes to show that the rest of the ribosome
couldn't translate mRNA. - Despite these efforts, translation persisted it
suggested that RNA was doing the translating. - Noller's et al. Later identified a few crucial
locations in ribosomal RNA that allow
translation.
23RNA Speed Rate of Reaction
- RNA was also hypothesized to help catalyze the
synthesis of new RNA (e.g., it was acting like a
type of enzyme)
24RNA Speed Rate of Reaction cont.
- Interestingly, Charles Wilson was successful in
getting RNA to speed a reaction that doesn't
involve DNA or RNA - Wilson found and cultivated ribozymes that could
carry out alkylation a hundred times faster than
the protein that's normally responsible for it in
a series of experiments designed to mimic
evolution. - He began with billions of messenger RNAs, random
sheets torn from volumes of DNA , and presented
them with carbon and nitrogen atoms. - Some were able to stick one of each atom
together.
25RNA Speed Rate of Reaction cont.
- Although RNAs can't reproduce like animals or
plants, given the right materials, they can make
copies of themselves that are more or less
identical. - Surprisingly, it's the less-identical ones -
those that have errors in them - that win over
time. - Subtle differences that may make an RNA better
able to put carbon and nitrogen together - or
render it completely useless, which is usually
what happens. - By selecting the RNAs that could speed
alkylation and then letting them reproduce,
generation after generation, Wilson eventually
wound up with a group of RNAs that were really
good at sticking the atoms together.
26Conclusions
- The rudiments of RNA-directed protein synthesis
may have been the weak binding of specific amino
acids to bases along RNA molecules, which
functioned as templates holding a few amino acids
together long enough for them to be linked.
- If RNA happened to synthesize a short
polypeptide chain that in turn behaved as an
enzyme helping the RNA molecule to replicate,
then the early chemical dynamics included
molecular cooperation and competition
27Conclusions
- The first steps toward replication and
translation of genetic information may have been
taken by molecular evolution even before RNA and
polypeptides became packaged within membranes - Once primitive genes and their products became
confined to membrane enclosed compartments the
units could have evolved collectively