Title: Chemical Evolution by Natural Selection
1Chemical Evolution by Natural Selection
- Chrisantha Fernando
- School of Computer Science
- University of Birmingham
- 16th October 2006
2My Claim
- I claim that the spontaneous origin of a
geophysical natural selection machine was
necessary for the production of increasingly
ordered chemical organizations ultimately leading
to a nucleotide producing metabolism. - I reject other self-organizing principles that
have been proposed to explain the origin of
metabolism.
3How did unlimited heredity arise?
- Template replication of sequences allows
unlimited heredity, 4100 1060 messages. - If a new message was produced each second for 4
billion years, we would still have only 1038 of
the 1060 possible messages. - How could template replication arise?
4Ribonucleotides could not have formed
spontaneously.
- Specific synthesis of ribose, specific
phosphorylating agents.
5The need for Self-Organization.
- Clearly, some complex chemistry must have
self-organized on the primitive earth and
facilitated the appearance of the RNA world.
Leslie Orgel, (2000). - Graham Cairns-Smith Clay Templates.
- PNAs etc.. Eschenmoser.
- Metabolic Self-Organization. I will discuss how
metabolic self-organization could arise through
natural selection.
6Chemical Evolution
- Millers non-random synthesis of formic acid,
alanine, glycine etc eventually resulted in tar
a combinatorial explosion of polymers, but no
increasingly ordered chemical organizations.
7- What modifications must be made to this protocol
to allow
8What do we want?
- Open ended evolution (Bedau et al 2000)
- Origin of basic autonomy, i.e. a dissipitive
system capable of the recursive generation of
functional constraints (Ruiz-Mirazo, 2004). - Production of nucleotides (Maynard-Smith
Szathmary, 1995). - Coupled cycling of bioelements (Morowitz, 1968)
- Maximization of entropy production by the
biosphere (Kleidon, 2004) - The minimal unit of life Membrane, Template
Replication, Metabolism. (Ganti, 2003) - Autopoetic units, (Membrane, Metabolism)
(Maturana and Verala, 1992).
9What is Metabolism?
- The set of processes (e.g. chemical reactions)
producing the constituents of the organism. - An organism is a spatially distinct unit.
- But some people try to define metabolism
non-spatially, e.g. a closed and self-maintaining
set of chemicals and reactions (Dittrich and
Spironi, 2005, Kauffman, Fontana, etc). - But organismal metabolism is not closed, it is
externally recycled. - A spatially distinct individual necessary for
organismal metabolism, the sort which interests
us.
10Theories of Self-Organization of Metabolism are
Flawed.
- Eigens idea and Kauffmans model of Reflexive
autocatalytic sets of proteins. - Fontanas idea of self-organization of higher
order chemical organizations in a flow reactor,
modeled with Lambda Calculus. - Morowitz idea (and recently Dewers arguments
for) a self-organizing force due to the existence
of a steady state energy flux.
11Reflexive Autocatalytic Sets
- Each member has its formation catalyzed by one or
more members of the set.
12Kauffman Side-steps Side-Reactions
The system is spreading if the problem of
poisoning catalysis is not completely ignored as
Kauffman did.
Kauffmans Universe
Calculations of probabilities about such systems
always assume that a protein may or may
not catalyse a given legitimate reaction in the
system but that it would not catalyse harmful
side reactions. This is obviously an error. Hence
the paradox of specificity strikes again -- the
feasibility of autocatalytic attractor sets seems
to require a large number of component
types (high n), whereas the plague of side
reactions calls for small systems (low n). (Eors
Szathmary, 2000)
Our Universe
13Kauffman Ignores Precursor Depletion
If there is depletion then the precursors of the
set must be re-cycled! In Kauffmans universe
there is constant excess of a vast diversity
of precursors. In our universe, we need to
assume more limited initial recycling
capability.
Kauffmans Universe
Our Universe
14Conclusion on Kauffman
- Kauffman has proposed an alternative
self-organizing principle in addition to natural
selection, but it does not work if - We take side-reactions seriously.
- We assume limited diversity of recyclable
precursors. - No reflexive autocatalytic set has been produced.
- We reject this as a relevant self-organizing
princple in the origin of life.
15Fontana and Buss Lambda Calculus.
- They claim, self-organization arises in a system
lacking any formulation of Darwinian selection. - Flow reactor consisting of string re-writing
expressions, no mass or energy conservation, but
chemical reactions are modeled as equivalence
classes of operations. - If self-copying is forbidden, larger (L1)
organizations of string subsets arise that are
self-maintaining. - They claim NS could not happen, but it could
since there could be gt 1 L1 organization present.
- String gt a maximum length are forbidden, i.e.
again the problem of a combinatorial explosion
producing tar is nicely forgotten. - In conclusion We reject that any self-organizing
principle other than natural selection acts in
Fontanas reactor, and we reject that it would
work in real chemistry since the same problem of
side-reactions is ignored.
16Energy Flow Organizes a System.
- Claims that life is driven by radiant energy to
attain complexity in the form of coupled cycling
of material. - Although careful to mention that complexity
alone is an insufficient measure for
characterizing the transition from non-living to
living, he goes on to claim that - Miller type experiments indicate the great
potential for a directed energy input to organize
a system., organization being defined as
compressible complexity.
17The Logical Error.
The last statement does not follow from the
first. e.g.the continued steady state flux
through a cloud or a Bernard cell does not arise
because the physical properties of the system
were informationally specified (ordered) by
the energy flux itself.
18Energy Flux not a driving force for
organization.
- Only a small subset of systems driven by external
energy become increasingly organized, in others
the size of the sink increases, with loss of
capacity for recycling. - How does the subset of dissipative systems
increase their capacity for recycling and their
rate of entropy production? - I propose it is the subset capable of natural
selection that have this property. A steady-state
energy flux is necessary for the maintenance of
the initial natural selection machine.
19Natural Selection
- Algorithmic process occurring in populations of
entities having multiplication, heredity and
variation (JMS, 1986). - What is the simplest machine capable of
sustaining natural selection, that is likely to
have formed spontaneously? - The Oparin school first proposed natural
selection as a mechanism of prebiotic evolution,
but with little experimental success.
20Alexander Oparin 1894-1980
Coacervates spontaneously formed polypeptide
structures. He distinguished between artificial
and natural coacervates. He proposed variation in
polypeptide composition. No self-replication or
heredity was demonstrated.
21Fox Dose, Folsome, Bahinder, Weber
- Fox and Dose Polypeptide microspheres in which
budding occurred due to potentially non-random
polycondensation reactions. Details of heredity
were not studied. (1977). - Folsome observed that the thin oily scum on the
surface of the water in the Miller experiment
formed exponentially growing microstructures and
then sank to the bottom of the flask (no
continued lineage). (1979) - Bahinder showed that formaldehyde, ammonium
phosphate, mineral salts and ammonium molybdate
exposed to sunlight formed spherical
microstructured called Jeewanu.(1954). - Weber (2005) described a synthesis of
microspherules from sugers and ammonia without
reference to Bahinders work. - But no-one has demonstrated natural selection in
populations of spontaneously formed phase
separated individuals.
22Chemical Evolution by Natural Selection
- The origin of metabolism occurred under the
following conditions. - A spontaneous natural selection machine arose
capable of - Production of lipophilic material to replenish
phase separated individuals formed from that
material. - A process of agitation to replicate a liposome
- A reaping of liposomes to impose selective
pressure. - The capacity for variation by chemical
avalanches within liposomes. - Some novel chemicals produced in an avalanche can
aid I. liposome growth, ii. liposome division.
231
1
The artificial version for the lab.
24(1) Basal Liposome Growth
No chemical reactions Just phase separation
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
25(2) Liposome Division
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
a
26(3) Chemical Avalanches?
Pyrite
27a
b
28b
c d
RARE (low flux) reaction
a
29C happens to be autocatalytically produced, it
need not have been.
b
c d
High flux reaction
c e
a
?
But now we must calculate the reactions of e
and so on.
This is the avalanche.
30The model asks
- Is the production of increasingly ordered
metabolism possible when variation is by chemical
avalanches, most of which are harmful or neutral? - What metabolic topology is evolved?
- What thermodynamic organization of metabolism is
evolved? - What are the fundamental constraints for natural
selection to act in such a system? -
31The Algorithm
- A hill-climbing algorithm is used to select for
liposomes that maximize their growth after a
fixed period. - Parental (liposome) fitness is assessed, a child
is produced that inherits half the parental
material, and has experienced an avalanche. If
its fitness is greater than the parent, it
replaces the parent, else a new offspring is
produced and assessed.
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33The Artificial Chemistry
34Energy
- Each species is assigned a free energy of
formation, Gf. - Any novel reaction must be spontaneous,
- ?G Gproducts Greactants lt 0.
- The equilibrium ratio of a reaction is given by K
e-?G/RT. - kb 0.01 and kf 0.01K
- A species has an 80 chance of being lipophilic.
If a product is lipophilic, the reaction is
effectively irreversible.
35Initial conditions
- Food set. 100 mM aab, aaab, aabb, bbbb, aaaab,
aaabb, aabbb, abbbb. - Gf 1.0
- Growth set. 0mM abb (0.1), abbb (0.01), abbbb
(1), abbbbb (2), abbbbbb (3), abbbbbbb (4),
abbbbbbbb (5), abbbbbbbbb (5).
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38Definition of Fitness
39Results.
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46Energy dissipation increases
47Avalanche properties change over the course of
evolution.
As molecule size increases the chance of an
autocatalytic product from an avalanche
Decreases.
48Mean Avalanche Properties
49Conclusions
- Liposome level selection maintains molecular
replicators arising in chemical avalanches. - Autocatalytic constituents are more likely to be
short molecules with few atom types (given random
rearrangement reactions). - An ecology of autocatalysts exists,
non-competitive, competitive, parasitic,
cross-catalytic, but all selected on the basis of
by-product mutualism of autocatalysts within the
same liposome. - Lipophobic side products drive irreversible
reactions, whilst lipophilic non-reactive
products prevent continued drainage.
50Conclusions
- A more diverse food set promotes more complex
autocatalytic cycles, 1,2, 3 member cycles
observed. - Energy flux increases over evolutionary time for
two reasons energy demands of memory, energy
demands of growth. - Large generation numbers and large population
sizes will be necessary since most avalanches are
harmful or neutral, thus automated microfluidics
is required, perhaps under high pressure to
promote chemical avalanches.
51Acknowledgements
- Jon Rowe
- Eors Szathmary
- Hywel Williams
- Kepa Ruiz-Mirazo
- Fabio Mavelli
- Alvero Moreno
- Xabier Barandieran