The%20Origins%20of%20Life%20and%20Precambrian%20Evolution - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The%20Origins%20of%20Life%20and%20Precambrian%20Evolution

Description:

... ratio that is characteristic of molecules produced by ... all use ribosomes in the same way (translation) all ribosomes are composed of RNA protein ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:67
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: Phi692
Learn more at: https://jan.ucc.nau.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The%20Origins%20of%20Life%20and%20Precambrian%20Evolution


1
The Origins of Life and Precambrian Evolution
  • Chapter 16

2
Questions
  • What was the first living thing?
  • Where did it come from?
  • What was the last common ancestor of todays
    organisms and when did it live?
  • What is the shape of the tree of life?
  • How did the last common ancestors descendants
    evolve into todays organisms?

3
Cartoon of the tree of life (Fig. 16.1)
4
What is alive?
  • Living things have
  • the ability to replicate or reproduce, together
    with the ability to store and transmit heritable
    information to have a genotype
  • the ability to express that information to have
    a phenotype
  • the ability to evolve to make changes in the
    heritable material and to have those changes
    tested in order to distinguish valuable ones
    from detrimental ones

5
Molecules as living things
  • In principle, a molecule could be alive by our
    definition
  • If it had the ability to copy itself using raw
    materials in its environment, and if errors in
    copying led to differences in the speed of
    self-replication or in chemical stability
  • In this case, the genotype is the chemical
    structure of the molecule, and the phenotype is
    the speed of self- replication or stability of
    the molecule

6
Protein vs. nucleic acid
  • Proteins possess the enzymatic function that
    would presumably be necessary for a
    self-replicating molecule but there is no
    evidence that proteins can propagate themselves
  • Nucleic acids possess, in principle, the ability
    to direct their self-replication via
    complementary base-pairing but until about 20
    years ago were not known to possess any enzymatic
    function

7
The RNA world hypothesis
  • Catalytic RNA molecules were a transitional form
    between non-living matter and the earliest cells
  • In the early 1980s it was discovered
    independently by Sidney Altman and Thomas Cech
    that some RNA molecules had enzymatic activity
    specifically, they could form and break the
    phosphoester bonds that link adjacent nucleotides
    in nucleic acids ribozymes
  • This enzymatic function would be essential if
    nucleic acids were the first self-replicating
    things

8
Ribozyme from Tetrahymena themophila a
self-splicing intron between adjacent rRNA
genes(Fig. 16.2 a)
9
The catalysis performed by the Tetrahymena
ribozyme in vitro (Fig. 16.2 b)
10
The case for an RNA-based system as an early life
form
  • Existence of catalytic RNA
  • RNA is a core component of the apparatus for
    translating genetic information into proteins
    rRNA a component of ribosomes (probably the
    component that actually catalyzes protein
    synthesis), and tRNA adapters also required for
    protein synthesis
  • Ribonucleoside triphosphates (ATP, GTP) are the
    basic energy currency of all cells and are
    components of electron-transfer cofactors such as
    NAD (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) and FAD
    (flavin adenine dinucleotide)

11
Can RNA evolve? experimental evolution of
RNA(Beaudry and Joyce 1992)
  • Select for the ability of Tetrahymena ribozyme to
    catalye the cutting of a DNA oligonucleotide and
    attachment of a fragment to its 3 end

12
Test tube evolution of RNA (Beaudry and Joyce
1992) (Fig. 16.4)
13
Can RNA evolve? experimental evolution of
RNA(Beaudry and Joyce 1992)
  • Experiment was seeded with a large population of
    randomly mutated ribozymes
  • After 10 generations the catalytic ability of
    the average RNA in the population had improved by
    a factor of 30
  • Most of the improvement in catalytic ability was
    attributable to mutations at 4 locations
  • Many additional experiments with natural and
    synthetic RNA have produced ribozymes that can
    catalyze reactions such as phosphorylation,
    peptide bond formation, and carbon-carbon bond
    formation.
  • BUT, a crucial piece is missing from the
    experiment that we have just described
    self-replication

14
Genotypic changes in an evolving RNA population
(Beaudry and Joyce 1992) (Fig. 16.5b)
15
Toward self-replicating RNA molecules
  • So far, we do not have a self-replicating RNA
    molecule (or a self-replicating system of RNA
    molecules)
  • If we can produce such a thing (perhaps by
    selective breeding experiments in the
    laboratory) then, by one definition at least, we
    will have succeeding in creating life (although
    obviously not complex cells)

16
Laboratory evolution of the ability of catalyze
the joining of adjacent nucleotides (phosphoester
bond) (Bartel and Szostak 1993)
  • Variable population of synthetic RNA molecules
    selected for ability to catalyze joining of
    nucleotides
  • This is not self-replication, but a necessary
    function of a self-replicating RNA molecule
  • Experiment still depends on the use of
    replicating enzymes to reproduce the
    successful RNA molecules after each generation

17
Test-tube selection scheme for identifying
ribozymes that can link nucleotides (Bartel and
Szostak 1993) (Fig. 16.6 a,b)
18
Test-tube selection scheme for identifying
ribozymes that can link nucleotides (Bartel and
Szostak 1993) (Fig. 16.6 c,d)
19
Test-tube selection scheme for identifying
ribozymes that can link nucleotides (Bartel and
Szostak 1993) (Fig. 16.6 e)
20
Evolution of catalytic ability in a laboratory
population of ribozymes (Bartel and Szostak 1993)
( Fig. 16.7)
21
RNA world summary
  • RNA molecules possess at least some of the
    necessary properties of living systems
  • the sequence of nucleotides provides a heritable
    information storage mechanism ( genotype)
  • Catalytic ability is a variable, heritable
    phenotype upon which selection can act
  • Natural or synthetic ribozymes possess a variety
    of enzymatic activities, including the ability to
    join nucleotides together to make short (40 - 50
    bp) polynucleotide strands
  • However, so far, no one has succeeded in
    producing an RNA molecule that can copy itself
  • Even if that is achieved, it still leaves the
    question of how the first RNA molecules were made

22
Pre-biotic synthesis of organic moleculesthe
Miller Urey experiments (1953)
  • Water vapor methane ammonia hydrogen
    electric spark amino acids (glycine, alanine)
  • Similar experiments by others have yielded other
    organic compounds, including nitrogenous bases
    (from ammonia and hydrogen cyanide) and ribose
    (from formaldehyde)

23
The Oparin Haldane model (Fig. 16.12)the
prebiotic soup
24
Criticisms of Miller Ureyand Oparin Haldane
  • Earths early atmosphere may not have been
    composed of methane and ammonia, but rather
    carbon dioxide and nitrogen, which would not have
    been favorable for formation of the necessary
    organic molecules (although aldehydes could be
    formed from carbon dioxide)
  • Formation and stabilization of polymers of basic
    buiding blocks (such as amino acids) in the
    aqueous prebiotic soup also appears to present
    difficulties (mineral scaffolding?)
  • Still a long way from biological polymers to
    cells

25
Extra-terrestrial origins?
  • Meteorites are sources of amino acids, at least
    some of which survive impact
  • The Panspermia hypothesis
  • Life originated elsewhere in the solar system and
    was carried here on meteorites that originated
    from other planets or moons, or possibly life
    originated outside the solar system
  • McKay et al. (1996) meteroite from Mars
    contained globules of carbonate magnetite, iron
    sulfide, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
    and a suggestion of microfossils that resemble
    bacteria
  • Many (most?) are not convinced that the Martian
    rock provides evidence of life the compounds
    that were present can also be formed by abiotic
    processes
  • In any event, the Panspermia hypotheis merely
    shifts the problem of the origin of life to
    somewhere else at some other time

26
When was life first present on Earth?
  • Radiometric dating of meteorites suggests that
    the solar system, including Earth, is about 4.5
    to 4.6 billion years old
  • Sedimentary rocks from Greenland, and dated at
    3.7 billion years, contain microscopic graphite
    globules that have a 12C/13C isotopic ratio that
    is characteristic of molecules produced by
    biological processes
  • This may be about the oldest evidence of life
    that we are likely to find, because conditions
    much before that might have been unsuitable for
    life, or would have obliterated earlier origins
    of life

27
The history of large impacts on Earth and Moon
(Sleep et al. 1989) (Fig. 16.11)
Red boxes represent lunar impacts blue boxes
terrestrial impacts (some of which are
hypothetical. Dashed line represents impact
energy sufficient to vaporize the global
ocean. A Archaean spherule beds V
Vredevort S Sudbury M Manicougan K/T
Cretaceous-Tertiary impact crater (Yucatan)
28
What was the most recent common ancestor of all
extant organisms?
  • Regardless of the origin of organic molecules,
    and whether or not an RNA world was an
    intermediate step in the evolution of life, the
    evidence that all present day life forms share a
    common ancestor is compelling
  • All life forms (except some viruses) use DNA and
    proteins, and all use them in the same way (same
    20 amino acids, same genetic code)
  • The oldest cellular fossils (which resemble
    bacteria) are 3.4 billion years old

29
The phylogeny of everything
  • Carl Woese (and others)
  • We need a highly conserved molecule that has
    recognizable similarities across all life forms
  • Small subunit ribosomal RNA
  • all organisms have ribosomes
  • all use ribosomes in the same way (translation)
  • all ribosomes are composed of RNA protein
  • all ribosomes have similar structure, being
    composed of small and large subunits

30
Small-subunit rRNA phylogeny (Woese 1996) (Fig.
16.18)Three-domain classification
31
The tree of life old style (Fig.
16.17)five-kingdom classification
32
Three-domain classification systemBacteria,
Archaea, Eucarya
  • Archaea (archaebacteria) more closely related to
    eukaryotes than they are to true Bacteria
  • Archaea composed of two (or three) kingdoms
  • Protista must be abandoned as a kingdom
    (paraphyletic) or must include animals, plants,
    and fungi.
  • Animals, plants, and fungi do appear as natural,
    monophyletic groups (with removal of slime molds
    from fungi)

33
What was the most recent common ancestor like?
  • Highly evolved and biologically sophisticated
    perhaps similar to modern bacteria
  • All living organisms store genetic information as
    DNA and have similar transcription and
    translation machinery
  • DNA polymerases are relatively similar across
    domains
  • All organisms have DNA-dependent RNA polymerases
    that show strong similarities across all domains

34
Different genes give different universal
phylogenies 1 (Fig. 16.22 a,b)
35
Different genes give different universal
phylogenies 2 (Fig. 16.22 c,d)
36
Horizontal gene transfer
  • Inconsistencies among genes for the universal
    phylogeny have led to the suggestion that taxa
    have exchanged genes horizontally
  • Bacteria are known to be able to take up DNA from
    their environment and to incorporate that DNA
    into their genomes (transformation, etc.)
  • 18 of E. coli genes estimated to have arrived by
    horizontal gene transfer in last 100 million
    years (Lawrence and Ochman 1998)

37
Evidence for horizontal gene transfer of the
HMGCoA reductase gene into an archaean (Doolittle
and Lodgson 1998) (Fig. 16.23)
38
The cenancestor was not a single species, but a
community (Fig. 16.26)
39
The latest possible date for the root of the tree
of life
  • Oldest known probable eukaryotic fossils (algae)
    are 1.85 2.1 billion years old
  • Fossil cyanobacteria also suggest that the root
    is more than 2 billion years old
  • The most recent date for the root of the tree of
    all living organisms is between 3.4 and 2 billion
    years ago

40
The origin of mitochondria and chloroplasts
  • The mitochondria and chloroplasts of eukaryotic
    cell have their own genomes
  • Analysis of small-subunit rRNA genes suggests
    that both organelles are derived from bacteria
    which have become obligate endosymbionts

41
Placement of mitochondria and chloroplasts on the
universal tree based on small-subunit rRNA
genes(Giovannoni et al. 1988) (Fig. 16.30)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com