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Sigam o Carbono -2

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Title: Sigam o Carbono -2


1
Sigam o Carbono -2
2
Four types of organic macromoleculesin living
systems.
  • Most of the molecules in the living systems are
    water (H2O) and large organic macromolecules
  • Carbohydrates
  • Lipids
  • Proteins
  • Nucleic Acids

3
Carbohydrates (sugars, starches)
  • Representatives
  • Glucose, Fructose
  • Many hydroxyl
  • groups (-OH)
  • Soluble in water
  • Form Polysaccharides
  • Good energy source
  • Structural support for
  • organisms (cellulose
  • - the main constituent of wood)

4
Glucose
Fructose
Table sugar
5
Glucose polymerization
H2O
Linked by dehydration reaction
Polysaccharides
In starch molecule (potato) there can be 100s
thousands of glucose units
6
Carbohydrates are important as a source of
energy for life
  • Respiration
  • CH2O O2 ? CO2 H2O Energy
  • In reality
  • C6H12O6 6O2 ? 6CO2 6H2O Energy
  • Fermentation
  • C6H12O6 ? 2CO2 2C2H6O Energy

7
But there are ways to get energy without
carbohydrates.
  • Methanogenesis
  • CO2 4 H2 ? CH4 2H2O Energy
  • Sulfate reduction
  • 4H2 SO42- ? S2- 4H2O Energy

8
Lipids (fats and oils)
  • Representatives fatty acids and cholesterol
  • Poorly soluble
  • Good (concentrated)
  • energy source
  • Flexible
  • (cell membrane material)

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10
Lipids are important for the formation of the
cell membrane
  • Some lipids have hydrophilic (love water) head
    and hydrophobic tail
  • In solution these lipids can form monolayers,
    bilayers and bilayer vesicles spontaneously
    pre-cells.

11
Monolayer
Micells
Bilayer
Bilayer vesicle
12
Membrane Lipids are very complex
13
Cell Membrane Lipids
14
ORIGINS OF LIFE?
15
Two Approaches to the origin of life
  • Top-down strategy is to
  • look at the present day biology
  • and extrapolate (project) back towards
  • the simplest living entities.
  • Bottom-up strategy is to make
  • the complex building blocks of life
  • (organic macromolecules) and put
  • them together.

16
Top-down strategy How would the most ancient
cell look like?
  • Cells are very diverse in size, shape and
    complexity but there are 2 basic cell types
  • Prokaryotes are much simpler and smaller than
    eukaryotes
  • Eukaryotes have a cell nucleus (to protect DNA)
    while prokaryotes do not
  • Prokaryotes are single-celled only
  • Eukaryotes may be either single-celled or
    multicellular

17
Prokaryotes
18
Eukaryotic cell
19
Eukaryotes vs. Prokaryotes
  • Who outnumbers and outweighs the other?
  • Who is more dependent on the other?

20
Eukaryotes look much more complex then
prokaryotes. Do we see the difference in the DNA
structure? Yes
21
  • Is the genome (order of nucleotides) of
    Eukaryotes and Prokaryotes completely different?
    No
  • Some parts of the genome change more easily than
    others in the course of evolution
  • A segment of the DNA responsible for coding of
    ribosomal parts (16S RNA, 1500 nucleotides) is
    very well conserved.

22
  • A part of the gene for 16S RNA (1500
    nucleotides) for different organisms.
  • Corresponding segments of nucleotide sequence
    from an archaean (Methanococcus jannaschii), a
    eubacterium (Escherichia coli) and a eucaryote
    (Homo sapiens) are aligned in parallel.
  • Sites where the nucleotides are identical between
    species are indicated by a vertical line.
  • Genetic information conserved since the
    beginnings of life.

23
Top-down strategyThe Tree of Life
  • By looking at the changes in 16S RNA we can
    identify three domains of life Bacteria, Archaea,
    and Eucaryotes

Prokaryotes
24
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25
Bottom-up strategy
  • Bottom-up strategy to the origin of life is to
    make complex building blocks of life and try to
    put them together.
  • But first we need to answer how was it possible
    to make any organic molecules at all without
    biology?

26
EARTH TODAY
Organics from space
Abiotic synthetic reactions on the early Earth
Prebiotic soup
Prebiotic polymers
Protein/DNA world (modern biochemistry)
RNA world
The origin of life
Bada Lazcano (Science, 2002)
27
Problems with abiotic organic synthesis.
  • Almost all organic carbon which we observe today
    is produced biologically (photosynthesis)
  • CO2 H2O ? CH2O O2
  • Carbon which comes out of volcanoes is in a form
    of CO2
  • CO2 gas mixture does not produce
  • organic molecules on its own

organic
inorganic
28
Terrestrial vs. Extraterrestrial
  • Terrestrial origin organic synthesis occurred
    somewhere in the Earth environment
  • Extraterrestrial origin organic material was
    synthesized in space and was brought to Earth
    somehow

29
Urey-Miller Experiment
1) At some point scientists believed that the
ancient atmosphere was rich in CH4 and NH3 2)
But! Just mixing CH4, NH3, H2O, H2 would not
produce any organic material 3) Miller showed
that a spark discharge (lightning) would produce
organic molecules up to 10-15 of the initial CH4
by mass
30
The Miller-Urey-Experiment
FIRST EXPERIMENTAL FORMATION OF
BIOLOGICALLY RELEVANT MOLECULES UNDER PREBIOTIC
CONDIDTIONS
31
Formation of organic molecules in the gas phase
  • UV can be used for organic synthesis as well
  • The key is to produce carbon radicals
  • CH4 h? ? CH3 H
  • CH3 CH3 ? C2H6 M
  • C2H6 h? ... ? C2H
  • C2nH2 C2H ? C2n2H2 H
  • Polymerization is extremely sensitive to O
    abundance

32
Titans Organic Haze Layer
Haze is thought to form from photolysis (and
charged particle irradiation) of CH4
(Picture from Voyager 2)
33
Advantages of Organic synthesis in the ancient
atmosphere
  • UM-like experiments produced many types of
    organic molecules which are used in proteins
  • We would expect lightning and UV radiation in the
    prebiotic atmosphere
  • No need to deliver organic material to Earth it
    would be already here

34
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35
Difficulties for the organic synthesis via UM
experiment
  • It is hard to justify large amounts of NH3 and
    CH4 in the prebiotic atmosphere
  • In the CO2-rich atmosphere organic production by
    spark discharge is not very efficient
  • If CH4/CO2 lt 0.1 essentially no organic
    production

36
Trainer et al., 2005 2006)
37
Hydrothermal vents
  • Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. Under high
    temperatures and pressures CO and H2 can form
    hydrocarbons
  • (2n1)H2 nCO ? CnH(2n2) nH2O
  • where 'n' is a positive integer

38
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39
Advantages of Organic synthesis in the
Hydrothermal Vents
  • Hydrothermal vents were likely to be present in
    the prebiotic environment
  • Organic synthesis requires only CO2, H2O and
    silicate rocks.
  • Serpentinization
  • Spinel polymerization

Olivine
Serpentine
Magnetite (spinel group)
40
Difficulties of the organic synthesis via
Hydrothermal Vents
  • No clean catalysts in nature. Original
    Fischer-Tropsch reaction goes fast in the
    presence of iron and cobalt
  • Only very simple organics can be generated. No
    amino-acids, no PAHs etc.

41
  • Since both atmosphere and hydrothermal vents have
    problems producing organics we need to look
    somewhere else. Space!

42
Key hole Nebula
Gaseous Pillars Eagle Nebula
Hale-Bopp
Murchinson
Titan
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