Literature DB >> 26841066

The Origin of Life in Alkaline Hydrothermal Vents.

Victor Sojo1,2, Barry Herschy1, Alexandra Whicher1, Eloi Camprubí1, Nick Lane1,2.   

Abstract

Over the last 70 years, prebiotic chemists have been very successful in synthesizing the molecules of life, from amino acids to nucleotides. Yet there is strikingly little resemblance between much of this chemistry and the metabolic pathways of cells, in terms of substrates, catalysts, and synthetic pathways. In contrast, alkaline hydrothermal vents offer conditions similar to those harnessed by modern autotrophs, but there has been limited experimental evidence that such conditions could drive prebiotic chemistry. In the Hadean, in the absence of oxygen, alkaline vents are proposed to have acted as electrochemical flow reactors, in which alkaline fluids saturated in H2 mixed with relatively acidic ocean waters rich in CO2, through a labyrinth of interconnected micropores with thin inorganic walls containing catalytic Fe(Ni)S minerals. The difference in pH across these thin barriers produced natural proton gradients with equivalent magnitude and polarity to the proton-motive force required for carbon fixation in extant bacteria and archaea. How such gradients could have powered carbon reduction or energy flux before the advent of organic protocells with genes and proteins is unknown. Work over the last decade suggests several possible hypotheses that are currently being tested in laboratory experiments, field observations, and phylogenetic reconstructions of ancestral metabolism. We analyze the perplexing differences in carbon and energy metabolism in methanogenic archaea and acetogenic bacteria to propose a possible ancestral mechanism of CO2 reduction in alkaline hydrothermal vents. Based on this mechanism, we show that the evolution of active ion pumping could have driven the deep divergence of bacteria and archaea.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26841066     DOI: 10.1089/ast.2015.1406

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Astrobiology        ISSN: 1557-8070            Impact factor:   4.335


  56 in total

Review 1.  Walking over 4 Gya: Chemical Evolution from Photochemistry to Mineral and Organic Chemistries Leading to an RNA World.

Authors:  Kunio Kawamura; Marie-Christine Maurel
Journal:  Orig Life Evol Biosph       Date:  2017-04-21       Impact factor: 1.950

2.  Wavy membranes and the growth rate of a planar chemical garden: Enhanced diffusion and bioenergetics.

Authors:  Yang Ding; Bruno Batista; Oliver Steinbock; Julyan H E Cartwright; Silvana S S Cardoso
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-08-02       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Thermodynamics, Disequilibrium, Evolution: Far-From-Equilibrium Geological and Chemical Considerations for Origin-Of-Life Research.

Authors:  L M Barge; E Branscomb; J R Brucato; S S S Cardoso; J H E Cartwright; S O Danielache; D Galante; T P Kee; Y Miguel; S Mojzsis; K J Robinson; M J Russell; E Simoncini; P Sobron
Journal:  Orig Life Evol Biosph       Date:  2016-06-06       Impact factor: 1.950

4.  On the differing growth mechanisms of black-smoker and Lost City-type hydrothermal vents.

Authors:  Silvana S S Cardoso; Julyan H E Cartwright
Journal:  Proc Math Phys Eng Sci       Date:  2017-09-13       Impact factor: 2.704

5.  Bijective codon transformations show genetic code symmetries centered on cytosine's coding properties.

Authors:  Hervé Seligmann
Journal:  Theory Biosci       Date:  2017-11-16       Impact factor: 1.919

6.  Innovation: an emerging focus from cells to societies.

Authors:  Michael E Hochberg; Pablo A Marquet; Robert Boyd; Andreas Wagner
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2017-12-05       Impact factor: 6.237

Review 7.  The "Origin-of-Life Reactor" and Reduction of CO2 by H2 in Inorganic Precipitates.

Authors:  J Baz Jackson
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2017-08-01       Impact factor: 2.395

8.  Intrinsic concentration cycles and high ion fluxes in self-assembled precipitate membranes.

Authors:  Yang Ding; Julyan H E Cartwright; Silvana S S Cardoso
Journal:  Interface Focus       Date:  2019-10-18       Impact factor: 3.906

Review 9.  On the beneficent thickness of water.

Authors:  E Branscomb; M J Russell
Journal:  Interface Focus       Date:  2019-10-18       Impact factor: 3.906

10.  Prebiotic Synthesis of Glycine from Ethanolamine in Simulated Archean Alkaline Hydrothermal Vents.

Authors:  Xianlong Zhang; Ge Tian; Jing Gao; Mei Han; Rui Su; Yanxiang Wang; Shouhua Feng
Journal:  Orig Life Evol Biosph       Date:  2016-09-23       Impact factor: 1.950

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