| Literature DB >> 29168482 |
Claudia Bonfio1, Luca Valer1, Simone Scintilla1, Sachin Shah2, David J Evans2, Lin Jin3, Jack W Szostak3, Dimitar D Sasselov4, John D Sutherland5, Sheref S Mansy1.
Abstract
Iron-sulfur clusters are ancient cofactors that play a fundamental role in metabolism and may have impacted the prebiotic chemistry that led to life. However, it is unclear whether iron-sulfur clusters could have been synthesized on prebiotic Earth. Dissolved iron on early Earth was predominantly in the reduced ferrous state, but ferrous ions alone cannot form polynuclear iron-sulfur clusters. Similarly, free sulfide may not have been readily available. Here we show that UV light drives the synthesis of [2Fe-2S] and [4Fe-4S] clusters through the photooxidation of ferrous ions and the photolysis of organic thiols. Iron-sulfur clusters coordinate to and are stabilized by a wide range of cysteine-containing peptides and the assembly of iron-sulfur cluster-peptide complexes can take place within model protocells in a process that parallels extant pathways. Our experiments suggest that iron-sulfur clusters may have formed easily on early Earth, facilitating the emergence of an iron-sulfur-cluster-dependent metabolism.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29168482 PMCID: PMC5808832 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.2817
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427