- #1
Mike S.
- 91
- 32
- TL;DR Summary
- My favorite notion is hydroxylapatite and the formose reaction. What are your thoughts?
So far, my favorite notion for abiogenesis starts with the formose reaction, which is directly catalyzed in the presence of hydroxylapatite (the naturally occurring mineral which our bodies also use in bones). A short series of steps converts formaldehyde directly into ribose with fairly good yield. Occurring in the presence of a phosphate-containing mineral, I imagine that this reaction might lead to phosphoribose, which might then react with nitrogen compounds to create a nucleotide. I'm not sure precisely how the nucleotides would emerge from a combination of ammonia, formaldehyde and perhaps carbon dioxide, but they would have a wider range than the modern four bases. Especially, consider nicotinic acid and flavin derivatives. (Folate, though somewhat reminiscent of a dinucleotide, should not be needed where free formaldehyde is available)
Besides phosphate, hydroxylapatite contains calcium ions, which chelate dicarboxylic acids - including the Krebs cycle intermediates. A reverse TCA cycle has been proposed for early life, but for this scenario I'm supposing formaldehyde gas is present in solution, meaning glyceraldehyde (a step in the formose reaction before ribose) is being fed into the Krebs cycle, and CO2 is being released as a waste product as in animals.
NADH is an RNA dinucleotide, one step beyond the RNA nucleotides already supposed to be present here. It could carry away hydrogen from the reaction. The destination would be to form lipids - specifically phospholipids bound to the hydroxylapatite substrate. That would not be a cell membrane, but a half-membrane with the hydrophobic face potentially exposed, perhaps as a "filter feeding" surface to attract hydrophobic compounds, but it would nonetheless partially enclose nucleotides and metabolites on the hydroxylapatite surface. Note that phospholipids have such an affinity for hydroxylapatite that it forms plaques on our fatty arteries.
The net reaction then might be something like 3CH2O -> 2(CH2)n + CO2 + H2O. So far as I know such a disproportionation of formaldehyde might release energy, though I haven't hunted down enough figures to be sure. Such a life form would seem to plausibly have sugars, nucleotides, and lipids -- probably no proteins unless there is free hydrogen cyanide in the environment. It might feed on dissolved gas and hydrophobic compounds, and reproduce by breaking off as a piece of membrane partially surrounding a substrate surface. It would lack a reliable genetic code, apart from some differences in the ratios of nucleotides present, but might acquire one if they begin to form bonds with one another, allowing them to extend some distance outward from the hydroxylapatite surface. What's most curious about this notion is that it seems like most of our biology - apart from the key advance of proteins - should have been established in the first day or so of living things. If it were true, then we should expect aliens might try to eat us, or provide useful nutrients, and if killed they might even leave chemically familiar skeletons behind.
How would you assess these ideas?
Besides phosphate, hydroxylapatite contains calcium ions, which chelate dicarboxylic acids - including the Krebs cycle intermediates. A reverse TCA cycle has been proposed for early life, but for this scenario I'm supposing formaldehyde gas is present in solution, meaning glyceraldehyde (a step in the formose reaction before ribose) is being fed into the Krebs cycle, and CO2 is being released as a waste product as in animals.
NADH is an RNA dinucleotide, one step beyond the RNA nucleotides already supposed to be present here. It could carry away hydrogen from the reaction. The destination would be to form lipids - specifically phospholipids bound to the hydroxylapatite substrate. That would not be a cell membrane, but a half-membrane with the hydrophobic face potentially exposed, perhaps as a "filter feeding" surface to attract hydrophobic compounds, but it would nonetheless partially enclose nucleotides and metabolites on the hydroxylapatite surface. Note that phospholipids have such an affinity for hydroxylapatite that it forms plaques on our fatty arteries.
The net reaction then might be something like 3CH2O -> 2(CH2)n + CO2 + H2O. So far as I know such a disproportionation of formaldehyde might release energy, though I haven't hunted down enough figures to be sure. Such a life form would seem to plausibly have sugars, nucleotides, and lipids -- probably no proteins unless there is free hydrogen cyanide in the environment. It might feed on dissolved gas and hydrophobic compounds, and reproduce by breaking off as a piece of membrane partially surrounding a substrate surface. It would lack a reliable genetic code, apart from some differences in the ratios of nucleotides present, but might acquire one if they begin to form bonds with one another, allowing them to extend some distance outward from the hydroxylapatite surface. What's most curious about this notion is that it seems like most of our biology - apart from the key advance of proteins - should have been established in the first day or so of living things. If it were true, then we should expect aliens might try to eat us, or provide useful nutrients, and if killed they might even leave chemically familiar skeletons behind.
How would you assess these ideas?