Literature DB >> 32416624

The ambivalent role of water at the origins of life.

Andrey do Nascimento Vieira1, Karl Kleinermanns2, William F Martin1, Martina Preiner1.   

Abstract

Life as we know it would not exist without water. However, water molecules not only serve as a solvent and reactant but can also promote hydrolysis, which counteracts the formation of essential organic molecules. This conundrum constitutes one of the central issues in origin of life. Hydrolysis is an important part of energy metabolism for all living organisms but only because, inside cells, it is a controlled reaction. How could hydrolysis have been regulated under prebiotic settings? Lower water activities possibly provide an answer: geochemical sites with less free and more bound water can supply the necessary conditions for protometabolic reactions. Such conditions occur in serpentinising systems, hydrothermal sites that synthesise hydrogen gas via rock-water interactions. Here, we summarise the parallels between biotic and abiotic means of controlling hydrolysis in order to narrow the gap between biochemical and geochemical reactions and briefly outline how hydrolysis could even have played a constructive role at the origin of molecular self-organisation.
© 2020 The Authors. FEBS Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Federation of European Biochemical Societies.

Entities:  

Keywords:  geochemistry; hydrolysis; hydrothermal vents; mineral catalysis; molecular self-organisation; origin of life; protometabolism; serpentinising systems; water activity; water-rock interactions

Year:  2020        PMID: 32416624     DOI: 10.1002/1873-3468.13815

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  FEBS Lett        ISSN: 0014-5793            Impact factor:   4.124


  7 in total

1.  How the first life on Earth survived its biggest threat - water.

Authors:  Michael Marshall
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2020-12       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  A prebiotic basis for ATP as the universal energy currency.

Authors:  Silvana Pinna; Cäcilia Kunz; Aaron Halpern; Stuart A Harrison; Sean F Jordan; John Ward; Finn Werner; Nick Lane
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2022-10-04       Impact factor: 9.593

3.  Frontiers in Prebiotic Chemistry and Early Earth Environments.

Authors:  Ulrich F Müller; Jamie Elsila; Dustin Trail; Saurja DasGupta; Claudia-Corina Giese; Craig R Walton; Zachary R Cohen; Tomislav Stolar; Ramanarayanan Krishnamurthy; Timothy W Lyons; Karyn L Rogers; Loren Dean Williams
Journal:  Orig Life Evol Biosph       Date:  2022-07-07       Impact factor: 1.120

4.  A Thermodynamic Model for Water Activity and Redox Potential in Evolution and Development.

Authors:  Jeffrey M Dick
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2022-03-13       Impact factor: 2.395

5.  Energy at Origins: Favorable Thermodynamics of Biosynthetic Reactions in the Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA).

Authors:  Jessica L E Wimmer; Joana C Xavier; Andrey D N Vieira; Delfina P H Pereira; Jacqueline Leidner; Filipa L Sousa; Karl Kleinermanns; Martina Preiner; William F Martin
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2021-12-13       Impact factor: 5.640

6.  Role of geochemical protoenzymes (geozymes) in primordial metabolism: specific abiotic hydride transfer by metals to the biological redox cofactor NAD.

Authors:  Delfina P Henriques Pereira; Jana Leethaus; Tugce Beyazay; Andrey do Nascimento Vieira; Karl Kleinermanns; Harun Tüysüz; William F Martin; Martina Preiner
Journal:  FEBS J       Date:  2022-01-03       Impact factor: 5.622

7.  On the prebiotic selection of nucleotide anomers: A computational study.

Authors:  Lázaro A M Castanedo; Chérif F Matta
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2022-06-09
  7 in total

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