Origin and Evolution of Life on Earth (Week 5) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Origin and Evolution of Life on Earth (Week 5)

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Life colonized planet in very short time frame ( 500 M years) ... Evolutionary significance: positive fitness. Accelerants = Catalysts = Enzymes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Origin and Evolution of Life on Earth (Week 5)


1
Origin and Evolution of Life on Earth (Week 5)
  • Searching for the origin
  • Functional beginnings of life
  • Focus on enzymes (lab)
  • From chemistry to biology at the molecular level
  • Prokaryotes and oxygen
  • Eukaryotes and explosion of diversity
  • Mass extinctions, asteroids and climate change
  • Evolutions of humans (what a bore!)
  • Conclusions

2
Searching for the Origin
  • What is the question?
  • The tools and methodologies
  • Principles of chemistry (e.g., chemistry of
    water)
  • Principles of physics (e.g., 1st and 2nd Law of
    TD, climate)
  • Principles of biology (e.g., key macromolecules)
  • Principles of geology (e.g., radiometric dating)
  • Occams razor
  • Conclusions plausible scenario of the events and
    processes that lead to the origin of life

3
Searching for the Origin
  • When did life begin?
  • Evidence
  • Widespread life forms (3.5 B years ago)
  • Stromatolites (3.5 B years ago)
  • Fossilized cells (3.5 B years ago)
  • Radiometric dating carbon isotopes (3.85 B years
    ago)
  • Carbon 12 versus Carbon 13
  • Range of dates 4.1 to 3.85 B years ago
  • Conclusions
  • Life arose late in the Hadean Eon
  • Life colonized planet in very short time frame (lt
    500 M years)

4
Searching for the Origin Comparative Genomics
  • Comparative morphology versus comparative
    genomics
  • Living Fossils of DNA and RNA
  • Sequence of nucleotides in DNA and genome
  • Pattern and process of change in sequences
  • Comparing sequences reveals a pattern/order
  • Methodology of comparison rRNA (ribosomal RNA)

5
Searching for the Origin Three Branches of Life
Forms
  • Results from comparative genomics
  • Three major domains
  • Bacteria
  • Archaea
  • Eukarya
  • Common ancestor analysis
  • Comparison to organisms today
  • Deep sea volcanic vents
  • Thermophiles (hyperthermophiles)
  • Comparison to environment of Hadean Eon

6
Searching for the Origin
  • Domain Domain
    Domain
  • Bacteria Archaea
    Eukarya
  • Common
  • Ancestor

7
Searching for the Origin At What Place on Earth?
  • Options
  • Continental landscapes
  • Shallow pools
  • Hot springs
  • Deep sea vents
  • Data to support one or the other
  • Comparative genomics
  • Chemical energy (hydrogen sulfide)
  • FeS H2S FeS2 H2
    Free Energy
  • Conclusion deep sea vents
  • Probability of bombardment

8
Beginnings of Life on Earth
  • Organic chemistry
  • Transition from chemistry to biology
  • Panspermia
  • The evolution of sophisticated features of
    metabolism and information brokers
  • Conclusions
  • _________
  • Enzymes first

9
Catalysis in Living Systems Enzymes
  • Introduction
  • Most reactions are very, very slow (not
    sufficient to sustain life)
  • Mechanisms to accelerate specific reactions
    preferential acceleration
  • Evolutionary significance positive fitness
  • Accelerants Catalysts Enzymes
  • Proteins (relate to information brokers)
  • Change rate of reactions
  • High degree of specificity
  • Regenerated (not consumed)

10
Enzymes How They Work
  • Base case for reactions to occur
  • Reactants (A-B and C-D)
  • Products (A-D and B-C)
  • Energy analysis
  • Free energy (net change in energy between
    reactants and products DG)
  • Exothermic reactions (release energy/spontaneous)
  • Endothermic reactions (require energy to proceed)
  • Energy of activation (transition state or hill)
  • EA in diagram

11
Catalysis in Living Systems Enzymes
Transition State
EA
Free Energy G
A-B C-D
G
A-D B-C
12
Catalysis in Living Systems Enzymes
  • Efficacy of enzymes
  • Hill/transition state is the key
  • Mechanism
  • Lower energy of activation (EA) needed to
    surmount the hill)
  • Selectivity/specificity (lock and key analogy)
  • Active site of protein due to 3-D conformation
  • Regeneration
  • Conclusion
  • Absence of enzymes minutes to hours for reaction
  • Presence of enzymes 1,000 times per second

13
Catalysis in Living Systems Enzymes
Transition State
EA
Free Energy G
A-B C-D
G
A-D B-C
14
Enzymes Modification of the Rate of Reaction
  • Factors controlling efficacy of enzymes
  • Concentration of enzyme
  • Concentration of reactants
  • Factors affecting proteins (enzymes)
  • Temperature (compare humans versus thermophiles
    in hot springs)
  • pH
  • Mechanism (3-D conformation of proteins and lock
    key analogy)
  • Inhibitors

15
Evolutionary Perspective of Enzymes
  • Evolutionary advantage of enzymes
  • Specific acceleration of reactions
  • Fitness value positive
  • Information broker coded in the DNA
  • Mutation
  • Reproduction
  • How did enzymes come to be?

16
Ribozymes
  • What are ribozymes in current biochemistry?
  • NOT ribosomes
  • mRNA (small fragments)
  • Functions
  • Synthesis of RNA, membranes, amino acids,
    ribosomes
  • Properties
  • Catalytic behavior (enhance rates 20 times)
  • Genetically programmed
  • Naturally occurring (60-90 bases)

17
Ribozymes (continued)
  • Laboratory studies of ribozymes
  • Creation of RNA fragments at random with
    existence of enzyme-like properties
  • Variety of enzyme-like properties
  • Cleavage of DNA
  • Cleave of DNA-RNA hybrids
  • Linking together fragments of DNA
  • Linking together fragments of RNA
  • Transformation of polypeptides to proteins
  • Self-replication (2001)

18
Summary of Ribozymes
  • mRNA fragments
  • 3-D conformation like proteins (e.g., fold)
  • Functional ribozymes created at random in test
    tube
  • Exhibit catalytic behavior
  • Self replicate
  • Play a prominent/key role in any scenario for
    understanding the evolution of life at the
    biochemical and molecular level

19
RNA World
20
Beginnings of Life on Earth
  • Organic chemistry
  • Transition from chemistry to biology
  • Panspermia
  • The evolution of sophisticated features of
    metabolism and information brokers
  • Conclusions
  • _________
  • Enzymes first

21
Chemical Beginnings The Chemistry of Carbon
Polymers
22
Urey-Miller Experiment
23
Significance of and Sequel to Urey Miller
Experiment
  • Multiple variations of the study (e.g.,
    atmosphere)
  • 20 amino acids, sugars, bases for DNA and RNA,
    ATP, etc.
  • Significance scenario for the abiotic formation
    of key carbon polymers (macromolecules)
  • Probable environments
  • Deep sea vents
  • Tidal pools (role of repeated evaporation and
    concentration evapoconcentration asteroid
    bombardment)
  • Chemical events leading to an RNA World

24
Panspermia
25
Beginnings of Life on Earth
  • Organic chemistry
  • Transition from chemistry to biology
  • Panspermia
  • The evolution of sophisticated features of
    metabolism and information brokers
  • Conclusions
  • _________
  • Enzymes first

26
Functional Beginnings of Life Transition from
Chemistry to Biology
  • Ribozymes
  • Enzyme activity
  • Self replicating
  • Generation of biomacromolecules (C polymers
    e.g., sugars, nucleotides, ATP)
  • via abiotic processes on Earth (Urey-Miller)
  • via Panspermia
  • via biotic processes (e.g., ribozymes)
  • Role of mutations, natural selection and
    environment incremental changes in
    biomacromolecules that are inherited via RNA and
    DNA)

27
Functional Beginnings of Life Transition from
Chemistry to Biology
  • Glycolysis/Fermentation

6 Carbon Sugar/ Glucose
ATP (2)
3 Carbon Sugar/ Pyruvate
CO2
2 Carbon Sugar/ Acetyl Coenzyme A
28
Functional Beginnings of Life Transition from
Chemistry to Biology
  • Evolution of Photosynthesis
  • CO2 H2O Light CH2O O2
  • Key processes
  • Absorption of light (pigments)
  • Conversion of light energy into chemical energy
    (ATP)
  • Synthesis of simple carbon compounds for storage
    of energy
  • Purple bacteria and Cyanobacteria
  • Primitive forms (3.5 BYA)

29
Origin and Evolution of Life on Earth (Week 5)
  • Searching for the origin
  • Functional beginnings of life
  • Focus on enzymes (lab)
  • From chemistry to biology at the molecular level
  • Prokaryotes and oxygen
  • Eukaryotes and explosion of diversity
  • Mass extinctions, asteroids and climate change
  • Evolutions of humans (what a bore!)
  • Conclusions

30
Prokaryotes and Oxygen
of Present
4.8 4 3 2 1
0.7 0.1 0
Billions of Years Before Present
31
Functional Beginnings of Life Transition from
Chemistry to Biology
  • Glycolysis to Respiration

2 Carbon
Glycolysis/ Fermentation
6 Carbon
4 Carbon
Aerobic Metabolism (TCA)
ATP
5 Carbon
ATP
32
Prokaryotes and Oxygen
  • Evolution of Photosynthesis
  • CO2 H2O Energy CH2O O2
  • Evolution of respiration
  • CH2O O2 CO2 H2O Energy
  • Possibility that respiration is simply the
    reverse of photosynthesis
  • Oxygen crisis and the oxygen stimulation to
    evolution

33
Origin and Evolution of Life on Earth (Week 5)
  • Searching for the origin
  • Functional beginnings of life
  • Focus on enzymes (lab)
  • From chemistry to biology at the molecular level
  • Prokaryotes and oxygen
  • Eukaryotes and explosion of diversity
  • Mass extinctions, asteroids and climate change
  • Evolutions of humans (what a bore!)
  • Conclusions

34
Eukaryotes and an Explosion of Diversity
  • Incremental changes in evolution role of oxygen
    and diversification of organisms (explain ATP
    fitness)
  • Quantum changes in evolution
  • Symbiosis
  • Lynn Margulis theory eukaryotes are derived from
    prokaryotes
  • Compartmentalization and organelles
  • Bacterial origins of chloroplast and mitochondria

35
Mass Extinctions, Asteroids and Climate Change
  • Mass extinctions
  • Dramatic declines in a variety of species,
    families and phyla (gt25)
  • Timing of decline is concurrent
  • Rate of decline is precipitous (geological sense)
  • Example of catastrophism
  • Best example
  • Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary (65 M years ago)
  • K-T boundary and Alvarez theory of catastrophism

36
Mass Extinctions, Asteroids and Climate Change
K-T Boundary
  • Observations
  • Iridium deposits in distinct layers suggestion
    of an asteroid (10-15 Km)
  • Other trace elements (characteristics of
    asteroids)
  • Shocked quartz
  • Soot deposits
  • Conclusive Evidence
  • Impact crater 200 km off Yucatan Peninsula
    (Chicxulub Crater)

37
Mass Extinctions, Asteroids and Climate Change
Other examples
  • Other mass extinctions
  • Five major extinctions over last 600 M years
  • Evidence for gradualism
  • First principles evolution
  • Pattern in the data
  • Recovery response
  • Overall increment in number of families over
    geological time
  • Conclusions Catastrophism coupled with gradualism

38
Origin and Evolution of Life on Earth (Week 5)
  • Searching for the origin
  • Functional beginnings of life
  • Focus on enzymes (lab)
  • From chemistry to biology at the molecular level
  • Prokaryotes and oxygen
  • Eukaryotes and explosion of diversity
  • Mass extinctions, asteroids and climate change
  • Evolutions of humans (what a bore!)
  • Conclusions

39
Origin and Evolution of Life on Earth Conclusions
  • Plausible scenario for the early origin of life
    on Earth (abiotic and biotic)
  • Role of mutation and evolution in origin of
    increasingly more complex forms of metabolism
  • Role of major evolutionary and climatological
    events in pulses of diversification in biota
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