Title: The origin of life
1The origin of life
- Goals
- The fossil record for very early life
- Chemical evolutionamino acids to DNA
- The advance of life
- Cambrian Explosion
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2First inklings of life
- We can never know the age of the oldest life on
Earth, but we can determine upper and lower
limits for its age. - Upper limit the age of the Earth.
- Lower limit the age of the oldest fossils or
signs of life we can find - The more skilled we become at detecting ancient
life on Earth, the better we will be at detecting
it on other planets. - As in many things in science that are ultimately
unknowable, we can at least - make our best guess, and support this with sound
theory and observations.
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3The earliest three lines of evidence of life
- Stromatolites
- Stromatolites are relatively simple bacterial
communities that live in high-saline
environments. - In these communities, layers of blue-green
bacteria (cyanobacteria) are producers
(photoautotrophs). - The cyanobacteria overlie other bacteria
(chemoheterotrophs) which feed upon them.
Sediment embeds in the community, resulting in
the formation of large mats with a characteristic
shape. -
- Fossils are frequently found that look just like
stromatolites in structure, chemical, and
isotopic composition. - Fossil stromatolites date back to at least 3.5
b.y. old, i.e., the Archean eon.
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4The earliest three lines of evidence of life
- Microfossils
- What about actual fossils from ancient life? They
will probably be - ancient
- tiny
- easily destroyed
- hard to identify.
- The oldest, from Australia, are 3.465 b.y. old,
from the Apex chert deposits in Warrawoona,
Western Australia. - Originally thought to be remnants of
photosynthetic bacteria, but are now thought to
be related to ancient undersea volcanic activity
(i.e., black smokers). Perhaps they are
nonbiological in origin? - Even so, they still look like fossil
organisms.Controversial fossils have also been
found in Swaziland, South Africa.
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5The earliest three lines of evidence of life
- Microfossils (continued)
- Fossils up to 3 b.y. old are not very
controversial. - Fossils older than 3.5 b.y. are questionable and
under scientific debate. Perhaps they are
pseudo-fossils that were created by some peculiar
events of water seepage through rocks, etc. - The fact that they occur in widely separated rock
from the same era suggests, though that they are
indeed ancient fossils.
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6The earliest three lines of evidence of life
- Isotopic evidence
- The atom carbon occurs in several isotopes.
- 12C is the most common it has 6 protons and 6
neutrons. - 13C is rarer by a factor of about 89 it has 6
protons and 7 neutrons. - These isotopes are stablethey do not decay from
one form to another. - In rock, 13C to 12C ratios are around the typical
891. - Since the complex biochemical reactions of
photosynthesis discriminate against 13C, the
rarity of this isotope is heightened in plant
tissues. - (Note to botanists it is rarer in C4 and CAM
plants than C3 plants).
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7The earliest three lines of evidence of life
- Isotopic evidence (continued)
- Akilia Greenland has rock outcrops estimated to
be 3.85 b.y. old. - Apatite crystals in the rock contain graphite
(carbon). - Isotopic ratios of 13C to 12C in the graphite
suggest life was active when the rocks were being
created. - But are these rocks really sedimentary, and
therefore fossiliferous? - Currently, the feel within the scientific
community is that the Akilia evidence is highly
divided, but perhaps leaning towards believing it.
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8First inklings of life
- What can we infer from these lines of evidence?
- Life is probably 3.5 b.y. old on Earth
(stromatolites, microfossils) - Life may be 3.85 b.y. old on Earth (shakier
isotopic evidence) - (These are both lower limits for the age of life
on the planet life may be older still). - If the late heavy bombardment ended 3.9 b.y.a.,
it appears that life evolved within only a few to
several hundred million years after the Earths
surface stabilized. - This is pretty speedy. It suggests that on Earth,
life appeared readily. - Can we extrapolate this to other planets? Does
life appear rapidly, given a chance?
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9Steps towards life
- Let us look at how life might have developed on
Earth. - In increasing complexity, the key players are
- Simple carbon-containing molecules
- Complex organic molecules (amino acids)
- RNA
- DNA
- Life
- Simple carbon-containing molecules are common in
the Universe. But how did the more complex
structures come to be?
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10The Miller-Urey experiment
- In 1953, researchers at the University of Chicago
ran a set of experiments designed to recreate the
conditions of early Earth. - They started with various primitive compounds in
the mix - The system included a heat source, a cooling
source, and an electrical source - Cook the experiment for a week!
- They ran many different types of simulations.
- What did they find?
- The simple molecules had turned into complex
organic molecules. - Miller and Urey detected the formation of five
amino acids. - 10-15 of the carbon was in organic compounds!
- Modern perspectives on the experiment
- Better model atmospheric composition decreases
the yield significantly. - Reexaminations have shown 22 amino acids in the
mix!
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11The Miller-Urey experiment
- More to think about...
- There are many amino acids, but the ones that
were created by the Miller-Urey experiment are
those found in life on Earth. - Looking at the oldest parts of genes on life (the
genes that all life forms share), we find they
are mostly made out of a subset of amino
acidsthe ones preferentially synthesized by
Miller-Urey experiment. - The Miller-Urey experiment did not make life, but
his experiment was tiny and lasted only for a
week. - Creationists seize upon the lack of lifes
creation in the Miller-Urey experiment as
evidence that the natural creation of life is
impossible. I disagree! The experiment did not
set out to create life furthermore, it showed
that the creation of amino acids is very easy!
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12Sources of organic compounds
- Before life developed, the Earth must have had a
source of complex organic molecules. - What was this source?
- Atmospheric processes as suggested by Miller?
- Undersea volcanic vents, ultra-hot, and rich in
simple molecules, similar to the ingredients in
the Miller-Urey experiment? (Note one of the
Miller-Urey experiments that produced the richest
blend of organic molecules involved a stage that
squirted steam at the electrical sparknow we see
this is like a simulation of hydrothermal vents.) - Meteors and cometary material often includes
organic compounds such as amino acids. The
Murchison meteorite contains 90 amino acids,
including 19 of the 20 used by life on Earth.
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13So you have amino acids, what next?
- We have determined that simple molecules can
easily be assembled into complex organic
molecules, like amino acids. - What is the next stage of complexity?
- Certain types of fine-grained silicate materials
called clays have a natural repeating surface
grain. - It has been shown that amino acids can adhere to
these clays, and then become ordered into short
lengths of RNA. - Strands of RNA as large as 100 bases have formed
in small-scale laboratory experiments! - Presumably, on a planet-wide scale, and with
millions of years to play, you could make larger
nucleic acids, such as moderately complex RNA
molecules! - Then what?
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14Chemical evolution
- Cool RNA facts
- Nucleic acids such as RNA and DNA need special
molecules called enzymes to replicate themselves. - It has been observed that RNA itself can act as a
kind of enzyme (called a ribozyme). - It has also been observed that RNA itself can, at
least partially, catalyze (i.e., cause to happen)
its own replication. - Suppose
- Suppose, long ago, moderately complex RNA
molecules developed on clays. - If some of the RNA molecules had the ability to
replicate themselves, they would start increasing
in numbers. - RNA molecules that replicated themselves more
rapidly and reliably would increase in numbers,
and would thus dominate the chemical composition. - This is called chemical evolution.
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15RNA to DNA
- In a world of chemical evolution, random
variations in molecules, and errors introduced in
RNA replication, would be the basic fuel for
changes in the RNA chemistry. - One set of changes would change RNA to DNA (by
doubling the strands). - ? Now you have all the pieces of life RNA, DNA,
and enzymes. - In modern cells, these three elements are all
present and work together - DNA and RNA need enzymes to replicate
- Enzymes are created by RNA, following
instructions from DNA. - (To make enzymes you need DNA/RNA to make
DNA/RNA you need enzymes!) - Critics (who have not followed the research
regarding RNA formation in clay) cite modern
cells as a system that cannot have formed
naturallyhow do you break into the
DNA-RNA-enzyme cycle? - Now we know at least one wayRNA might have
developed on clay matrices!
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16The RNA world
- Here is a possible chain of events
- Simple molecules assembled into organic molecules
such as amino acids - Organic molecules accumulate on lattice-like
silicate clay deposits - Clay-facilitated reactions can cause the creation
of RNA - Replicating RNA entered a stage of chemical
evolution - Lipid cells group RNA, improving the
effectiveness of the chemistry - Lipid cells evolve membranes
- Membranous cells evolve into biological cells.
- Somewhere, the chemistry becomes biology.
- At some point above, RNA evolved into DNA. If
life evolved before DNA evolved, there might have
been a stage during which life was being run by
RNAan RNA world, instead of todays DNA world.
- RNA is less stable than DNA, with more
transcription errors. Evolution in an RNA world
would be more rapid.
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17Implications for extraterrestrial life
- Notice that at no point in these theories have we
assumed anything that is too particular about the
Earth. - Examples
- No assumption of a single large moon
- No assumption of only 1 a.u. from the Sun.
- This chain of logic for the formation of life is
plausible for any other world with the basic
compounds and conditions amenable for life. - And remember, it seems that when given the
chance, life evolved fast!
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18Panspermia and interplanetary sneezes
- Astronomers have detected organic compounds and
amino acids in meteorites and comets in space. - Nucleic acids have not been found in space. But
even so, could life itself be in space already? - Could meteorites be carrying life? Are we
descended from life alien to Earth? - Arrival of alien life via asteroids is
conceivable. Yet, life had to develop someplace,
at some point. - Since planets communicate with each other via
meteoric ejecta, planetary ecologies are coupled,
or at least interact at some level!
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19Life becomes complicated
- Once prokaryotes evolved, what next?
- Prokaryotes developed a tolerance for the waste
oxygen that began to accumulate (Proterozoic
Eon) - Eukaryotic life forms developed (Proterozoic
Eon) - Multicellular life developed (Phanerozoic Eon).
- Let us look at these three stages
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20The tale of toxic waste oxygen Part I
- The initial archean atmosphere did not have
oxygen. - The first life forms (chemoautotrophs) were
anaerobic, such as iron or sulfur-based. Evidence
for the anaerobic conditions are from banded iron
formations, which cannot form with O2 - The sulfur-based chemoautotrophs evolved
photosynthetic metabolisms based in sulfur,
becoming photoautotrophs - Photosynthesis switched from using H2S to H2O
perhaps 2.7 b.y.a? - The waste oxygen was locked into surface soils
and rocks. After 350 MY, the soils and rocks
became saturated, and began to accumulate in the
atmosphere.
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21The tale of toxic waste oxygen Part II
- About 2.35 b.y.a., atmospheric oxygen levels rose
above 0.002. This is called the great oxidation
event - Aerobic life developed in response to the oxygen
- Oxygen levels reached perhaps 10 of current
levels 540 m.y.a. (Cambrian explosion) - Oxygen levels peaked in the carboniferous period
360-300 m.y.a. (charcoal occurs in the fossil
record). At this time, O2 was as high as 35
(currently it is 21), which allowed for giant
invertebrates and amphibians. (Meganeura
dragonflys wingspan 50-75cm!) - We have evolved in response to a polluted
atmosphere.
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22Prokaryote to Eukaryote
- Bacteria, Archaea, Eukarya are all about the same
age - Eukarya absorbed organelles around 2.1 b.y.a.
- Nuclei store genetic material for the entire
cell. - Mitochondria are powerhouse factories that create
ATP. - Chloroplasts, found only in phototrophs,
photosynthesize. - Multicellular life makes its appearance.
- Some eukarya organelles (mitochondria and
chloroplasts) have their own DNA, which is
bacterial.
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23Advent of multi-celled life
- 545 MYAPhanerozoic eon begins
- Macroscopic life appeared on Earth
- Many phyla (basic body plans) of life appeared,
more than we have today - This Cambrian Explosion of life took only about
40 million years. - 475 MYAAlga evolved into land plants (e.g.,
Cooksonia) - 400 MYAAnimals were fully established on land.
- Why the Cambrian Explosion?
- Cellular/genetic complexity had reach some
critical level - Oxygen levels had begun to rise
- Climate change, such as an ending snowball Earth
phase - Minimal predation.
- We dont see many of these innovations today
because the many sophisticated competitors and
predators would interfere with new forms of early
life.
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24What about the supernatural?
- Where is God in all this?
- The influence of a supernatural force does not
seem to be required in the development of life - or at least, there appears to be a plausible way
for life to have developed, without needing to
invoke supernatural forces. - Even so, supernatural influences are NOT
prohibited by these scenarios. - The most parsimonious scientist would say that,
following Occams Razor, unnecessary elements
should be trimmed from a theory. Hence,
supernatural forces would not be a necessary
feature of the model. - Yet, it cannot be ruled out. Religion, by its
nature, cannot be falsified.
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