Title: How Did Life Begin? And What is Life?
1How Did Life Begin?And What is Life?
- Barry Selinsky
- Chemistry Department
- Villanova University
2How was life established on earth?
3 4God School
5God School Final Written Examination
- As a community committed to the Augustinian
ideals of truth, unity and love, God School
prides itself on maintaining the highest
standards of academic integrity and does not
tolerate any forms of academic dishonesty or
misconduct. Accordingly, each student who takes
an examination is expected to sign the following
statement - I, (sign your name)
- have not had any unsanctioned prior access to
this examination and will conduct myself in an
honest manner in regard to all aspects of this
examination. Unless authorized, I will not
discuss the contents of this examination with
other students.
6Final Thesis Project
- Create life.
- You may use any atomic materials up to and
including the element iron.
7Periodic Table
8Final Written Examination - Continued
- You may also use small molecules consisting of no
more than 5 total atoms and no more than 3
different elements. That is, water and HCN are
ok acetate (CH3COOH) is not.
9Final Written Examination - Continued
- You may also assume any environmental conditions
needed to complete the assignment.
10Good news and bad news
- The bad news there is no partial credit.
Either you make a living organism or you dont. - The good news you have 800 million years to
complete the exam!
11Assumptions in our attempts to determine how life
began
- All of todays organisms arose from a single
ancestor organism. - Support all organisms today share many common
features, proteins, and metabolic pathways.
12Evolution in pictures
13Corollary to first assumption
- If multiple types of organisms developed
simultaneously (or nearly so), one type dominated
and eliminated the others.
14What is the simplest life as we know it?
- Bacteria single cell organisms with the ability
to independently reproduce and generate new
bacteria.
15Bacteria are comprised of numerous small
molecules and four classes of macromolecules
- Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
- Proteins
- Polysaccharides (polymers of sugars)
- Lipids
16King of Prussia Mall A Multicellular Organism
17Costco A Modern Single Celled Organism
18The General store A primitive single cell
organism
19Definitions of Life
- Any population of entities which has the
properties of multiplication, heredity, and
variation. John Maynard Smith - Life is an expected, collectively self-organized
property of catalytic polymers. Stuart Kauffman - Life possesses the properties of replication,
catalysis, and mutability. Norman Horowitz
20Definitions of life
- Life is a self-sustained chemical system capable
of undergoing Darwinian evolution. Gerald Joyce - From this definition, what minimal elements must
life contain?
21- Life must be chemical
- As a result, computer generated artificial
intelligence is excluded. - Life sustains itself by gathering atoms and
energy form its environment. - If it doesnt eat, its not alive. Life requires
metabolism. - Living organisms must display variation.
- No two people, bunnies, or bacteria are
necessarily the same. Life requires reproduction
and genetic variability.
22Bacteria are comprised of numerous small
molecules and four classes of macromolecules
- Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA polymers of
nucleotides) - Proteins (polymers of amino acids)
- Polysaccharides (polymers of sugars)
- Lipids
- How can we make these?
23Millers experiments A production of amino acids
under possible primitive earth conditions.
24Millers amino acid synthesis
25Oros purine synthesis
26Amino acids, sugars, purines, and pyrimidines can
be made from simple precursors.Next, is it
possible to generate polymers of these materials
to make biomacromolecules important to life?
27Polymerization on crystalline templates
28The chirality issue
29Chiral molecules
30Order out of chaos the entropy problem
- Second law of thermodynamics
- In any spontaneous process there is always an
increase in the entropy of the universe.
31The theory of emergence
- While systems become more disordered with time,
local order and complexity arise due to the input
of energy.
32The Iron-Sulfur World
- Hypothesis life began at hydrothermal vents at
the bottom of the ocean, fed by a constant stream
of hot volcanic gas.
33Energy from volcanic gas
34The Reverse Citric Acid Cycle
35In support of the reverse citric acid cycle
- At hydrothermal vents, there is a constant stream
of hydrogen gas and energy generated from the
reaction of hydrogen sulfide with iron sulfide. - The reactions can be catalyzed by iron sulfide,
pyrite, or other iron-sulfur complex. - In organisms, the reactions are catalyzed by
enzymes. Most enzymes require iron-sulfur
clusters to work.
36Problems with the Iron-Sulfur world
- The iron sulfur world does not explain the
generation of genetic material, and does not
include reproduction or genetic variability.
37The RNA World
- Hypothesis Life began as a collection of a small
number of self-reproducing catalytic RNA
molecules localized within a small area.
38What is RNA?
39Evidence in support of the RNA World
- Some RNA molecules can catalyze chemical
reactions (mostly done by proteins). - Some RNA molecules can replicate themselves if
ribonucleotides are present. - This explains both metabolism and genetic
variability.
40Problems with the RNA world
- Self-replicating RNA molecules have only been
made up to 14 nucleotides long. Catalytic RNAs
are estimated to require at least 50 nucleotides. - There is no known physical encouragement for
multiple self-replicating RNA molecules to
collect in the same local area.
41Thanks for living!