Literature DB >> 28466946

Giant vesicles from rehydrated crude mixtures containing unexpected mixtures of amphiphiles formed under plausibly prebiotic conditions.

Michele Fiore1, Warren Madanamoothoo, Alexandra Berlioz-Barbier, Ofelia Maniti, Agnès Girard-Egrot, René Buchet, Peter Strazewski.   

Abstract

Giant lipid vesicles resemble compartments of biological cells, mimicking them in their dimension, membrane structure and partly in their membrane composition. The spontanenous appearance of closed membranes composed of bilayers of self-assembling amphiphiles was likely a prerequisite for Darwinian competitive behavior to set in at the molecular level. Such compartments should be dynamic in their membrane composition (evolvable), and sufficiently stable to harbor macromolecules (leak-free), yet semi-permeable for reactive small molecules to get across the membrane (stay away from chemical equilibrium). Here we describe bottom-up experiments simulating prebiotic environments that support the formation of simple amphiphilic molecules capable of self-assembling into vesicular objects on the micrometer scale. Long-chain alkyl phosphates, together with related amphiphilic compounds, were formed under simulated prebiotic phosphorylation conditions by using cyanamide, a recognized prebiotic chemical activator and a precursor for several compound classes. Crude dry material of the thus obtained prebiotic mixtures formed multilamellar giant vesicles once rehydrated at the appropriate pH and in the presence of plausibly prebiotic co-surfactants, as observed by optical microscopy. The size and the shape of lipid aggregates tentatively suggest that prebiotic lipid assemblies could encapsulate peptides or nucleic acids that could be formed under similar chemical prebiotic conditions. The formation of prebiotic amphiphiles was monitored by using TLC, IR, NMR and ESI-MS and UPLC-HRMS. In addition we provide a spectroscopic analysis of cyanamide under simulated prebiotic conditions in the presence of phosphate sources and spectroscopic analysis of O-phosphorylethanolamine as a plausible precursor for phosphoethanolamine lipids.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28466946     DOI: 10.1039/c7ob00708f

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Org Biomol Chem        ISSN: 1477-0520            Impact factor:   3.876


  7 in total

1.  The Origin and Early Evolution of Life: (Prebiotic) Systems Chemistry Perspective.

Authors:  Emiliano Altamura; Michele Fiore
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-10

Review 2.  The Impact of Salts on Single Chain Amphiphile Membranes and Implications for the Location of the Origin of Life.

Authors:  Sarah Maurer
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2017-11-14

3.  Crude phosphorylation mixtures containing racemic lipid amphiphiles self-assemble to give stable primitive compartments.

Authors:  Dimitri Fayolle; Emiliano Altamura; Alice D'Onofrio; Warren Madanamothoo; Bernard Fenet; Fabio Mavelli; René Buchet; Pasquale Stano; Michele Fiore; Peter Strazewski
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-12-22       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Towards the preparation of synthetic outer membrane vesicle models with micromolar affinity to wheat germ agglutinin using a dialkyl thioglycoside.

Authors:  Nathalie Berthet; Bastien Doumeche; Michele Fiore; Dimitri Fayolle; Olivier Renaudet; Peter Strazewski
Journal:  Beilstein J Org Chem       Date:  2019-04-17       Impact factor: 2.883

Review 5.  How Prebiotic Chemistry and Early Life Chose Phosphate.

Authors:  Ziwei Liu; Jean-Christophe Rossi; Robert Pascal
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2019-03-03

Review 6.  Investigating Prebiotic Protocells for A Comprehensive Understanding of the Origins of Life: A Prebiotic Systems Chemistry Perspective.

Authors:  Augustin Lopez; Michele Fiore
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2019-06-07

7.  The Origin and Early Evolution of Life: Prebiotic Chemistry.

Authors:  Michele Fiore
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2019-09-12
  7 in total

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