Title: How did the first organisms evolve
1How did the first organisms evolve?
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3When did life first evolve?
- Age of earth estimated to be 5 billion years
- Earliest fossils are of bacteria 3.5 billion
years ago - Stromatolites (deposits of cyanobacteria) are 3
billion years old
4Origins of Life
- Creationist ideas (not scientifically testable)
- Non-creationist theories include
- It came from outer space
- Universe is older than earth, explains rare
chemicals found in living organisms - Some organic chemicals are found on space rocks
- Life originated on earth from non-living
materials (Pre-biotic Evolution)
5Prebiotic Evolution of Complex Molecules
- Is not spontaneous generation as disproved by
Pasteur's experiments - May have taken 300 million years
- Earth atmosphere and conditions were very
different than todays environment - No oxygen was present
6Early earth environment
- Hot gases escaped due to weak gravity field
- Crust slowly solidified
- Hot inner core of nickel
- Pounded by meteors-vaporized all water
7Evolution of the Atmosphere
- Modern atmosphere 78 nitrogen, 21 oxygen, 1
argon - Small amounts of carbon dioxide, water vapor,
etc. - Early earth atmosphere had no oxygen
- No rust in sediments
- No ozone layer-very high ultraviolet radiation
- Lightning storms provided energy
8Where did the organic compounds come from?
- Three main hypotheses
- Formed in earth atmosphere
- Formed in undersea volcano vents
- Came on meteors from space
9Stanley Millers Experiment
- Combined early earth chemicals in lab
- hydrogen, methane, ammonia (no oxygen)
- Provided water vapor and energy (heat)
- Mixed them
- Found five amino acids and bases of nucleic acids
- Suggests that organic compounds formed and slowly
built up in earth's oceans
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11Another source of early compounds
- Hot volcanic vents in the oceans mix hydrogen and
sulfide - Provide energy that is not light dependent
12Meteor origin of organic compounds
- Organic compounds have been found on meteors
- Could have built up due to constant bombardment
13How did organic compound assemble outside of
cells?
- ATP (energy molecule) forms easily
- Nucleotides can form
- ATP can cause amino acids to form polypeptides
(protenoids) similar to modern proteins - Association of organic compounds concentrated
into protobionts
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15How can prebiotic cells form?
- Polypeptides, nucleic acids, and polysaccharides
concentrate themselves into tiny droplets called
coacervates - Coacervates can contain enzymes
- Coacervates can take up, change, and release
molecules - Protenoid microspheres are assocations of
protenoids that can absorb solutions, grow, and
divide
16Early non-living cells evolve metabolism
- Coacervates selectively absorb compounds
- As these run out, natural selection favors
alternate pathways - New pathways evolve slowly
17First genetic system
- All true cells must show heredity (a genetic
system) - Modern cells store information in DNA, transcribe
that into RNA, translate RNA into polypeptides - DNA-RNA scheme too complex for first cells
- RNA is more likely candidate for first genetic
system
18Why is RNA the likely candidate?
- RNA is simpler (single-strand vs. double-strand)
- RNA can assemble itself from component parts
- RNA can also act as an enzyme
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20What about the evolution of translation?
- Translation is the process of going from
RNA-polypeptides - Genetic code is an accident of history
- Only first two letters have meaning, but reads
all three
21Evolution of ribosomes and transfer RNA
- All ribosomal RNAs show similar anatomy,
suggesting common ancestor - Transfer RNA also show similarities indicating
common ancestor
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23Characteristics of first living cell
- Boundary to separate cell from environment
- Enzymes to extract energy,Energy storage in ATP
- RNA that controlled enzyme activity,RNA
replication - Specification of each amino acid by triplet codon
(genetic code) - Transfer RNA to attach amino acid to polypeptide
chain
24Evolution of modern cells
- Bacteria evolved around 3.5 billion years
- Lasted nearly 2 billion years before eukaryotic
cells evolved (1.7 billion)
25How did early life affect the environment?
- Early cells were heterotrophs (using energy from
other organic molecules) - No oxygen so did not use respiration pathway (all
were anaerobic) - Obtained energy by glycolysis or fermentation
- Autotrophs evolved to use light energy to build
organic molecules from inorganic molecules
26Impact of photosynthesis
- Created oxygen as waste product
- Oxygen powerful oxidizer, breaks things apart
- Food of early heterotrophs fell apart
- Allowed evolution of new type of heterotrophic
organism that uses oxygen to fuel respiration - New food chain of heterotrophs feeding on
autotrophs
27Evolution of mitochondria and chloroplasts
- Mitochondria and chloroplasts were likely
free-living prokaryotes - Based on the fact that they have unique DNA
- Became involved in endosymbiosis with eukaryotic
cells - Now totally dependent on eukaryotes
28Evolution of eukaryotic cells
- Eukaryotic cells are distinguished by internal
cell membranes - Creates specialized organelles (internal cell
structures)