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Gaudu N, Truong C, Farr O, Clouet A, Grauby O, Ferry D, Parent P, Laffon C, Ona-Nguema G, Guyot F, Nitschke W, Duval S. Nanometric and Hydrophobic Green Rust Minerals upon Exposure to Amino Acids and Nickel as Prerequisites for a Primitive Chemiosmosis. Life (Basel) 2025; 15:671. [PMID: 40283225 PMCID: PMC12028411 DOI: 10.3390/life15040671] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/07/2025] [Revised: 04/10/2025] [Accepted: 04/15/2025] [Indexed: 04/29/2025] Open
Abstract
Geological structures known as alkaline hydrothermal vents (AHVs) likely displayed dynamic energy characteristics analogous to cellular chemiosmosis and contained iron-oxyhydroxide green rusts in the early Earth. Under specific conditions, those minerals could have acted as non-enzymatic catalysts in the development of early bioenergetic chemiosmotic energy systems while being integrated into the membrane of AHV-produced organic vesicles. Here, we show that the simultaneous addition of two probable AHV components, namely nickel and amino acids, impacts green rust's physico-chemical properties, especially those required for its incorporation in lipid vesicle's membranes, such as decreasing the mineral size to the nanometer scale and increasing its hydrophobicity. These results suggest that such hydrophobic nano green rusts could fit into lipid vesicle membranes and could have functioned as a primitive, inorganic precursor to modern chemiosmotic metalloenzymes, facilitating both electron and proton transport in early life-like systems.
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Affiliation(s)
- Nil Gaudu
- Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (BIP), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7281 IMM-CNRS, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille, France; (C.T.); (O.F.); (A.C.); (W.N.); (S.D.)
| | - Chloé Truong
- Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (BIP), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7281 IMM-CNRS, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille, France; (C.T.); (O.F.); (A.C.); (W.N.); (S.D.)
| | - Orion Farr
- Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (BIP), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7281 IMM-CNRS, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille, France; (C.T.); (O.F.); (A.C.); (W.N.); (S.D.)
- Centre Interdisciplinaire des Nanosciences de Marseille (CINaM), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7325 CNRS, Campus de Luminy, 13288 Marseille, France; (O.G.); (D.F.); (P.P.); (C.L.)
| | - Adriana Clouet
- Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (BIP), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7281 IMM-CNRS, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille, France; (C.T.); (O.F.); (A.C.); (W.N.); (S.D.)
| | - Olivier Grauby
- Centre Interdisciplinaire des Nanosciences de Marseille (CINaM), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7325 CNRS, Campus de Luminy, 13288 Marseille, France; (O.G.); (D.F.); (P.P.); (C.L.)
| | - Daniel Ferry
- Centre Interdisciplinaire des Nanosciences de Marseille (CINaM), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7325 CNRS, Campus de Luminy, 13288 Marseille, France; (O.G.); (D.F.); (P.P.); (C.L.)
| | - Philippe Parent
- Centre Interdisciplinaire des Nanosciences de Marseille (CINaM), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7325 CNRS, Campus de Luminy, 13288 Marseille, France; (O.G.); (D.F.); (P.P.); (C.L.)
| | - Carine Laffon
- Centre Interdisciplinaire des Nanosciences de Marseille (CINaM), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7325 CNRS, Campus de Luminy, 13288 Marseille, France; (O.G.); (D.F.); (P.P.); (C.L.)
| | - Georges Ona-Nguema
- Institut de Minéralogie, de Physique des Matériaux et de Cosmochimie (IMPMC), Sorbonne Université, UMR 7590 CNRS, 4 Place Jussieu, 75005 Paris, France; (G.O.-N.)
| | - François Guyot
- Institut de Minéralogie, de Physique des Matériaux et de Cosmochimie (IMPMC), Sorbonne Université, UMR 7590 CNRS, 4 Place Jussieu, 75005 Paris, France; (G.O.-N.)
| | - Wolfgang Nitschke
- Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (BIP), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7281 IMM-CNRS, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille, France; (C.T.); (O.F.); (A.C.); (W.N.); (S.D.)
| | - Simon Duval
- Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (BIP), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7281 IMM-CNRS, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille, France; (C.T.); (O.F.); (A.C.); (W.N.); (S.D.)
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2
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van Dommelen E, Des Rosiers L, Crafton E, Hull NM. Microcystins are present in water treatment plant residuals and are impacted by extraction and quantification methodology. ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY 2025; 46:1704-1717. [PMID: 39324740 DOI: 10.1080/09593330.2024.2402098] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/31/2024] [Accepted: 09/01/2024] [Indexed: 09/27/2024]
Abstract
Microcystins (MCs), a toxin produced by some species of the photosynthetic autotrophic cyanobacteria, are the most studied and monitored cyanotoxin in water. Water treatment plant (WTP) residuals are the byproduct of water treatment consisting of solids removed from WTP processes and have been shown to contain cyanobacterial cells. However, the presence of MCs in WTP residuals has not been systematically demonstrated. Samples from four different WTPs across the United States were used to quantify MCs in residuals while assessing extraction and quantification methods adapted from water samples for solid matrices. MCs were present in 100% of samples. MC-LA was the most prevalent variant in these samples (70.05% of MCs quantified by UPLC-PDA). Natural degradation observed in a WTP storage lagoon was also investigated to determine the impact of physical, chemical, and biological processes on MC concentrations in high-biomass residuals. This study demonstrates that residuals of various characteristics across the United States contain MCs, and no one method was found to maximize results consistently across all samples. Cyanotoxins accumulating in WTP residuals are a growing concern. Implications of this work can help regulations and future studies of potential reuse applications and understanding of potential ecological significance of MCs accumulating in WTP residuals.
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Affiliation(s)
- Emma van Dommelen
- Ohio State University College of Engineering, Columbus, OH, USA
- Hazen and Sawyer, Columbus, OH, USA
| | | | | | - Natalie M Hull
- Ohio State University College of Engineering, Columbus, OH, USA
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3
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Chen C, Yi R, Igisu M, Afrin R, Sithamparam M, Chandru K, Ueno Y, Sun L, Laurenzi T, Eberini I, Fraccia TP, Wang A, James Cleaves H, Jia TZ. Primitive homochiral polyester formation driven by tartaric acid and calcium availability. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2025; 122:e2419554122. [PMID: 40117315 PMCID: PMC11962410 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2419554122] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/24/2024] [Accepted: 02/17/2025] [Indexed: 03/23/2025] Open
Abstract
α-hydroxy acids (αHAs), simple and prebiotically plausible organic monomers, were likely present in various environments on and off Earth and could have played a role in directing the emergence of the first homochiral living systems. Some αHAs, which could have been of varying chirality, can undergo dehydration polymerization into polyesters, which could assemble into membraneless microdroplets upon rehydration; understanding these processes is critical for unraveling how simple prebiotic molecules transitioned into more complex systems capable of supporting selective chemical reactions, a key step toward the origin of life. Here, we focused on tartaric acid (TA), a prebiotically relevant αHA with multiple chiral forms, to probe plausible mechanisms by which primitive αHA and polyester-based systems could have participated in selective homochiral polymer synthesis. Enantiopure solutions of d-TA or l-TA polymerize efficiently via dehydration, while racemic dl-TA polymerization is inhibited due to stereochemical incompatibility. We found that Ca2+ ions influence this process in two significant ways: 1) regulating TA monomer availability through selective crystallization, removing equal amounts of both enantiomers in racemic proportion and thereby enriching the enantiomeric excess of the remaining nonracemic TA solution; and 2) modulating polymerization by suppressing enantiopure TA polymerization while enabling dl-TA polymerization. These findings suggest that the differential availability of simple inorganic ions, such as Ca2+, could have indirectly mediated the selection of simple organic chiral monomers and the emergence of homochirality in primitive protocell-forming polymers, offering a pathway from nonliving to living matter in early Earth environments.
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Affiliation(s)
- Chen Chen
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Institute of Future Science, Institute of Science Tokyo, Meguro-ku, Tokyo152-8550, Japan
| | - Ruiqin Yi
- State Key Laboratory of Deep Earth Processes and Resources, Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou510640, China
| | - Motoko Igisu
- Institute for Extra-Cutting-Edge Science and Technology Avant-Garde Research, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Yokosuka237-0061, Japan
| | - Rehana Afrin
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Institute of Future Science, Institute of Science Tokyo, Meguro-ku, Tokyo152-8550, Japan
| | - Mahendran Sithamparam
- Space Science Center (ANGKASA), Institute of Climate Change, National University of Malaysia, Bangi, Selangor43650, Malaysia
| | - Kuhan Chandru
- Space Science Center (ANGKASA), Institute of Climate Change, National University of Malaysia, Bangi, Selangor43650, Malaysia
- Polymer Research Center, Faculty of Science and Technology, National University of Malaysia, Selangor43600, Malaysia
- Institute of Physical Chemistry, Center for Nanointegration Duisburg-Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen45141, Germany
| | - Yuichiro Ueno
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Institute of Future Science, Institute of Science Tokyo, Meguro-ku, Tokyo152-8550, Japan
- Institute for Extra-Cutting-Edge Science and Technology Avant-Garde Research, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Yokosuka237-0061, Japan
- Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo, Meguro-ku, Tokyo152-8550, Japan
| | - Linhao Sun
- World Premier International Research Center Initiative (WPI) Nano Life Science Institute, Kanazawa University, Kakuma-machi, Kanazawa920-1192, Japan
| | - Tommaso Laurenzi
- Dipartimento di Scienze Farmacologiche e Biomolecolari “Rodolfo Paoletti”, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milano20133, Italy
| | - Ivano Eberini
- Dipartimento di Scienze Farmacologiche e Biomolecolari “Rodolfo Paoletti”, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milano20133, Italy
| | - Tommaso P. Fraccia
- Dipartimento di Scienze Farmacologiche e Biomolecolari “Rodolfo Paoletti”, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milano20133, Italy
| | - Anna Wang
- School of Chemistry, University of New South Wales Sydney, Sydney, NSW2052, Australia
- Australian Center for Astrobiology, University of New South Wales Sydney, Sydney, NSW2052, Australia
- Ribonucleic Acid Institute, University of New South Wales Sydney, Sydney, NSW2052, Australia
- Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Synthetic Biology, University of New South Wales Sydney, Sydney, NSW2052, Australia
| | - H. James Cleaves
- Department of Chemistry, Howard University, Washington, DC20059
- Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, Seattle, WA98104
| | - Tony Z. Jia
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Institute of Future Science, Institute of Science Tokyo, Meguro-ku, Tokyo152-8550, Japan
- Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, Seattle, WA98104
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4
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Zimmermann J, Bora Basar A, Moran J. Nonenzymatic Hydration of Phosphoenolpyruvate: General Conditions for Hydration in Protometabolism by Searching Across Pathways. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 2025; 64:e202410698. [PMID: 39557618 PMCID: PMC11720399 DOI: 10.1002/anie.202410698] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/06/2024] [Revised: 11/05/2024] [Accepted: 11/17/2024] [Indexed: 11/20/2024]
Abstract
Numerous reactions within metabolic pathways have been reported to occur nonenzymatically, supporting the hypothesis that life arose upon a primitive nonenzymatic precursor to metabolism. However, most of those studies reproduce individual transformations or segments of pathways without providing a common set of conditions for classes of reactions that span multiple pathways. In this study, we search across pathways for common nonenzymatic conditions for a recurring chemical transformation in metabolism: alkene hydration. The mild conditions that we identify (Fe oxides such as green rust) apply to all hydration reactions of the rTCA cycle and gluconeogenesis, including the hydration of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to 2-phosphoglycerate (2PGA), which had not previously been reported under nonenzymatic conditions. Mechanistic insights were obtained by studying analogous substrates and through anoxic and radical trapping experiments. Searching for nonenzymatic conditions across pathways provides a complementary strategy to triangulate conditions conducive to the nonenzymatic emergence of a protometabolism.
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Affiliation(s)
- Joris Zimmermann
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
| | - Atalay Bora Basar
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
| | - Joseph Moran
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
- Department of Chemistry and Biomolecular SciencesUniversity of OttawaOttawaOntarioK1 N 6 N5Canada
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5
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McCaig CD. Electricity in the Creation of Life. Rev Physiol Biochem Pharmacol 2025; 187:19-28. [PMID: 39838004 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-68827-0_3] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/23/2025]
Abstract
How did life come into existence? How was the first membrane formed on Earth? And where? What were the conditions that promoted membrane creation and how were electrical forces essential for this to occur?
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Affiliation(s)
- Colin D McCaig
- Institute of Medical Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, UK
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6
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Gao M, Ma J, Fan X, Shi S, Xu J. Alkaline Modified Mesoporous Silica Supported Ruthenium Catalyst for Improved α-Amino Acid Synthesis. CHEMSUSCHEM 2024; 17:e202400166. [PMID: 38772858 DOI: 10.1002/cssc.202400166] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/25/2024] [Revised: 04/29/2024] [Accepted: 05/21/2024] [Indexed: 05/23/2024]
Abstract
Amino acids are a class of compounds with wide-ranging applications. The synthesis of amino acids from biomass-derived α-keto acids and ammonia is a sustainable way but the unstable primary imine intermediates (R-C=NH) easily form oligomers. Herein, targeting this problem, alkaline modified mesoporous silica was employed as a support for ruthenium (Ru/M-MCM-41), which could be used as a bifunctional catalyst in the reductive amination of α-keto acids to synthesize α-amino acids. The incorporation of Sr improved the dispersion of Ru nanoparticles and enhanced metal-support interactions via electron transfer from Sr to Ru, and the active Ru sites could efficiently hydrogenate primary imine intermediates to α-amino acids, thus prohibiting the formation of oligomers. Moreover, the Sr-dopant introduces base sites that could catalyze the hydrolysis of oligomers back to primary imine intermediates and finally hydrogenated to α-amino acids. As a result, >99 % yield of glycine was achieved from glyoxylic acid over Ru/Sr-MCM-41, which is nearly three times that achieved over Ru/MCM-41 (32.2 %).
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Affiliation(s)
- Mingxia Gao
- Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 457 Zhongshan Road, Dalian, 116023, P. R. China
- University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100049, P. R. China
| | - Jiping Ma
- Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 457 Zhongshan Road, Dalian, 116023, P. R. China
| | - Xiaomeng Fan
- Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 457 Zhongshan Road, Dalian, 116023, P. R. China
- University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100049, P. R. China
| | - Song Shi
- Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 457 Zhongshan Road, Dalian, 116023, P. R. China
| | - Jie Xu
- Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 457 Zhongshan Road, Dalian, 116023, P. R. China
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7
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Chimiak L, Hara E, Sessions A, Templeton A. Glycine synthesis from nitrate and glyoxylate mediated by ferroan brucite: An integrated pathway for prebiotic amine synthesis. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2024; 121:e2408248121. [PMID: 39467141 PMCID: PMC11551427 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2408248121] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/24/2024] [Accepted: 09/04/2024] [Indexed: 10/30/2024] Open
Abstract
Amino acids are present in all known life, so identifying the environmental conditions under which they can be synthesized constrains where life on Earth might have formed and where life might be found on other planetary bodies. All known abiotic amino acid syntheses require ammonia, which is only produced in reducing and neutral atmospheres. Here, we demonstrate that the Fe-bearing hydroxide mineral ferroan brucite [Fe0.33,Mg0.67(OH)2] can mediate the reaction of nitrate and glyoxylate to form glycine, the simplest amino acid used in life. Up to 97% of this glycine was detected only after acid digestion of the mineral, demonstrating that it had been strongly partitioned to the mineral. The dicarboxylic amino acid 3-hydroxy aspartate was also detected, which suggests that reactants underwent a mechanism that simultaneously produced mono- and dicarboxylic amino acids. Nitrate can be produced in both neutral and oxidizing atmospheres, so reductive amination of nitrate and glyoxylate on a ferroan brucite surface expands origins of life scenarios. First, it expands the environmental conditions in which life's precursors could form to include oxidizing atmospheres. Second, it demonstrates the ability of ferroan brucite, an abundant, secondary mineral in serpentinizing systems where olivine is partly hydrated, to mediate reductive amination. Finally, the results demonstrate the need to consider mineral-bound products when analyzing samples for abiotic amino acid synthesis.
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Affiliation(s)
- L. Chimiak
- Department of Geological Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO80309
| | - E. Hara
- Department of Geological Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO80309
| | - A. Sessions
- Department of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA91125
| | - A.S. Templeton
- Department of Geological Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO80309
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8
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Nan J, Peng X, Plümper O, ten Have IC, Lu JG, Liu QB, Li SL, Hu Y, Liu Y, Shen Z, Yao W, Tao R, Preiner M, Luo Y. Unraveling abiotic organic synthesis pathways in the mafic crust of mid-ocean ridges. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2024; 121:e2308684121. [PMID: 39388277 PMCID: PMC11513914 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2308684121] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/08/2023] [Accepted: 09/09/2024] [Indexed: 10/12/2024] Open
Abstract
The aqueous alteration of the oceanic lithosphere provides significant energy that impacts the synthesis and diversity of organic compounds, which are crucial for the deep carbon cycle and may have provided the first building blocks for life. Although abiotic organic synthesis has been documented in mantle-derived rocks, the formation mechanisms and complexity of organic compounds in crustal rocks remain largely unknown. Here, we show the specific association of aliphatic carbonaceous matter with Fe oxyhydroxides in mafic crustal rocks of the Southwest Indian Ridge (SWIR). We determine potential Fe-based pathways for abiotic organic synthesis from CO2 and H2 using multimodal and molecular nano-geochemical tools. Quantum mechanical modeling is further employed to constrain the catalytical activity of Fe oxyhydroxides, revealing that the catalytic cycle of hydrogen may play a key role in carbon-carbon bond formation. This approach offers the possibility of interpreting physicochemical organic formation and condensation mechanisms at an atomic scale. The findings expand our knowledge of the existence of abiotic organic carbon in the oceanic crustal rocks and emphasize the mafic oceanic crust of the SWIR as a potential site for low-temperature abiotic organic synthesis.
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Affiliation(s)
- Jingbo Nan
- Institute of Deep-Sea Science and Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Sanya572000, China
- Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing210008, China
- Center for High Pressure Science and Technology Advanced Research, Beijing100094, China
| | - Xiaotong Peng
- Institute of Deep-Sea Science and Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Sanya572000, China
| | - Oliver Plümper
- Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht3584 CD, The Netherlands
| | - Iris C. ten Have
- Debye Institute for Nanomaterials Science, Faculty of Science, Utrecht University, Utrecht3584 CG, The Netherlands
| | - Jing-Guang Lu
- State Key Laboratory of Quality Research in Chinese Medicines, Macau Institute for Applied Research in Medicine and Health, Macau University of Science and Technology, Taipa, Macau999078, China
| | - Qian-Bao Liu
- State Key Laboratory of Quality Research in Chinese Medicines, Macau Institute for Applied Research in Medicine and Health, Macau University of Science and Technology, Taipa, Macau999078, China
| | - Shao-Lin Li
- The State Key Laboratory of Lunar and Planetary Science, Macau University of Science and Technology, Taipa, Macau999078, China
| | - Yingjie Hu
- Nanjing Key Laboratory of Advanced Functional Materials, Nanjing Xiaozhuang University, Nanjing211171, China
| | - Yu Liu
- College of Geoscience and Surveying Engineering, China University of Mining and Technology (Beijing), Beijing100083, China
| | - Zhen Shen
- College of Geoscience and Surveying Engineering, China University of Mining and Technology (Beijing), Beijing100083, China
| | - Weiqi Yao
- Department of Ocean Science and Engineering, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen518055, China
| | - Renbiao Tao
- Center for High Pressure Science and Technology Advanced Research, Beijing100094, China
| | - Martina Preiner
- Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht3584 CD, The Netherlands
- Microcosm Earth Center, Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology and Philipps Universität Marburg, Marburg35032, Germany
- Center for Synthetic Microbiology, Marburg35032, Germany
- Geochemical Protoenzymes Research Group, Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology, Marburg35043, Germany
| | - Yongxiang Luo
- Institute of Deep-Sea Science and Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Sanya572000, China
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9
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Zimmermann J, Werner E, Sodei S, Moran J. Pinpointing Conditions for a Metabolic Origin of Life: Underlying Mechanisms and the Role of Coenzymes. Acc Chem Res 2024; 57:3032-3043. [PMID: 39367831 PMCID: PMC11483746 DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.4c00423] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/02/2024] [Revised: 09/18/2024] [Accepted: 09/20/2024] [Indexed: 10/07/2024]
Abstract
Famously found written on the blackboard of physicist Richard Feynman after his death was the phrase, "What I cannot create, I do not understand." From this perspective, recreating the origin of life in the lab is a necessary condition for achieving a deep theoretical understanding of biology. The "metabolism-first" hypothesis is one of the leading frameworks for the origin of life. A complex self-organized reaction network is thought to have been driven into existence as a chemical path of least resistance to release free energy in the environment that could otherwise not be dissipated, rerouting energy from planetary processes to organic chemistry. To increase in complexity, the reaction network, initially under catalysis provided by its geochemical environment, must have produced organic catalysts that pruned the existing flux through the network or expanded it in new directions. This boot-strapping process would gradually lessen the dependence on the initial catalytic environment and allow the reaction network to persist using catalysts of its own making. Eventually, this process leads to the seemingly inseparable interdependence at the heart of biology between catalysts (coenzymes, enzymes, genes) and the metabolic pathways that synthesize them. Experimentally, the primary challenge is to recreate the conditions where such a network emerged. However, the near infinite number of microenvironments and sources of energy available on the early Earth or elsewhere poses an enormous combinatorial challenge. To constrain the search, our lab has been surveying conditions where the reactions making up the core of some of the most ancient chemolithoautotrophic metabolisms, which consist of only a small number of repeating chemical mechanisms, occur nonenzymatically. To give a fresh viewpoint in the first part of this account, we have organized the results of our search (along with important results from other laboratories) by reaction mechanism, rather than by pathway. We expect that identifying a common set of conditions for each type of reaction mechanism will help pinpoint the conditions for the emergence of a self-organized reaction network resembling core metabolism. Many of the reaction mechanisms were found to occur in a wide variety of nonenzymatic conditions. Others, such as carboxylate phosphorylation and C-C bond formation from CO2, were found to be the most constraining, and thus help narrow the scope of environments where a reaction network could emerge. In the second part of this account, we highlight examples where small molecules produced by metabolism, known as coenzymes, mediate nonenzymatic chemistry of the type needed for the coenzyme's own synthesis or that turn on new reactivity of interest for expanding a hypothetical protometabolic network. These examples often feature cooperativity between small organic coenzymes and metal ions, recapitulating the transition from inorganic to organic catalysis during the origin of life. Overall, the most interesting conditions are those containing a reducing potential equivalent to H2 gas (electrochemical or H2 itself), Fe in both reduced and more oxidized forms (possibly with other metals like Ni) and localized strong electric fields. Environments that satisfy these criteria simultaneously will be of prime interest for reconstructing a metabolic origin of life.
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Affiliation(s)
- Joris Zimmermann
- University
of Strasbourg, CNRS, ISIS UMR 7006, 67000 Strasbourg, France
| | - Emilie Werner
- University
of Strasbourg, CNRS, ISIS UMR 7006, 67000 Strasbourg, France
| | - Shunjiro Sodei
- University
of Strasbourg, CNRS, ISIS UMR 7006, 67000 Strasbourg, France
| | - Joseph Moran
- University
of Strasbourg, CNRS, ISIS UMR 7006, 67000 Strasbourg, France
- Department
of Chemistry and Biomolecular Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5, Canada
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10
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Chandru K, Potiszil C, Jia TZ. Alternative Pathways in Astrobiology: Reviewing and Synthesizing Contingency and Non-Biomolecular Origins of Terrestrial and Extraterrestrial Life. Life (Basel) 2024; 14:1069. [PMID: 39337854 PMCID: PMC11433091 DOI: 10.3390/life14091069] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 11/07/2023] [Revised: 08/14/2024] [Accepted: 08/23/2024] [Indexed: 09/30/2024] Open
Abstract
The pursuit of understanding the origins of life (OoL) on and off Earth and the search for extraterrestrial life (ET) are central aspects of astrobiology. Despite the considerable efforts in both areas, more novel and multifaceted approaches are needed to address these profound questions with greater detail and with certainty. The complexity of the chemical milieu within ancient geological environments presents a diverse landscape where biomolecules and non-biomolecules interact. This interaction could lead to life as we know it, dominated by biomolecules, or to alternative forms of life where non-biomolecules could play a pivotal role. Such alternative forms of life could be found beyond Earth, i.e., on exoplanets and the moons of Jupiter and Saturn. Challenging the notion that all life, including ET life, must use the same building blocks as life on Earth, the concept of contingency-when expanded beyond its macroevolution interpretation-suggests that non-biomolecules may have played essential roles at the OoL. Here, we review the possible role of contingency and non-biomolecules at the OoL and synthesize a conceptual model formally linking contingency with non-biomolecular OoL theories. This model emphasizes the significance of considering the role of non-biomolecules both at the OoL on Earth or beyond, as well as their potential as agnostic biosignatures indicative of ET Life.
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Affiliation(s)
- Kuhan Chandru
- Space Science Center (ANGKASA), Institute of Climate Change, National University of Malaysia, Selangor 43600, Malaysia
- Polymer Research Center (PORCE), Faculty of Science and Technology, National University of Malaysia, Selangor 43600, Malaysia
- Institute of Physical Chemistry, CENIDE, University of Duisburg-Essen, 45141 Essen, Germany
| | - Christian Potiszil
- The Pheasant Memorial Laboratory for Geochemistry and Cosmochemistry, Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University, Misasa 682-0193, Tottori, Japan
| | - Tony Z Jia
- Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, Seattle, WA 98104, USA
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Meguro-ku 152-8550, Tokyo, Japan
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11
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Kaur H, Rauscher SA, Werner E, Song Y, Yi J, Kazöne W, Martin WF, Tüysüz H, Moran J. A prebiotic Krebs cycle analog generates amino acids with H 2 and NH 3 over nickel. Chem 2024; 10:1528-1540. [PMID: 38803519 PMCID: PMC7616004 DOI: 10.1016/j.chempr.2024.02.001] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/29/2024]
Abstract
Hydrogen (H2) has powered microbial metabolism for roughly 4 billion years. The recent discovery that it also fuels geochemical analogs of the most ancient biological carbon fixation pathway sheds light on the origin of metabolism. However, it remains unclear whether H2 can sustain more complex nonenzymatic reaction networks. Here, we show that H2 drives the nonenzymatic reductive amination of six biological ketoacids and glyoxylate to give the corresponding amino acids in good yields using ammonium concentrations ranging from 6 to 150 mM. Catalytic amounts of nickel or ground meteorites enable these reactions at 22°C and pH 8. The same conditions promote an H2-dependent ketoacid-forming reductive aldol chemistry that co-occurs with reductive amination, producing a continuous reaction network resembling amino acid synthesis in the metabolic core of ancient microbes. The results support the hypothesis that the earliest biochemical networks could have emerged without enzymes or RNA.
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Affiliation(s)
- Harpreet Kaur
- Institut de Science et d’Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006, Université de Strasbourg, 8 alleé Gaspard Monge, 67000 Strasbourg, France
| | - Sophia A. Rauscher
- Institut de Science et d’Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006, Université de Strasbourg, 8 alleé Gaspard Monge, 67000 Strasbourg, France
| | - Emilie Werner
- Institut de Science et d’Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006, Université de Strasbourg, 8 alleé Gaspard Monge, 67000 Strasbourg, France
| | - Youngdong Song
- Max-Planck-Institut für Kohlenforschung, Kaiser-Wilhelm-Platz 1, 45470 Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany
| | - Jing Yi
- Institut de Science et d’Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006, Université de Strasbourg, 8 alleé Gaspard Monge, 67000 Strasbourg, France
| | - Wahnyalo Kazöne
- Institut de Science et d’Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006, Université de Strasbourg, 8 alleé Gaspard Monge, 67000 Strasbourg, France
| | - William F. Martin
- Institute for Molecular Evolution, Heinrich-Heine-University of Düsseldorf, Universitätsstr. 1, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany
| | - Harun Tüysüz
- Max-Planck-Institut für Kohlenforschung, Kaiser-Wilhelm-Platz 1, 45470 Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany
| | - Joseph Moran
- Institut de Science et d’Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006, Université de Strasbourg, 8 alleé Gaspard Monge, 67000 Strasbourg, France
- Institut Universitaire de France, 75005 Paris, France
- Department of Chemistry and Biomolecular Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5, Canada
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12
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Williamson MP. Autocatalytic Selection as a Driver for the Origin of Life. Life (Basel) 2024; 14:590. [PMID: 38792611 PMCID: PMC11122578 DOI: 10.3390/life14050590] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/03/2024] [Revised: 04/29/2024] [Accepted: 05/02/2024] [Indexed: 05/26/2024] Open
Abstract
Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection was revolutionary because it provided a mechanism by which variation could be selected. This mechanism can only operate on living systems and thus cannot be applied to the origin of life. Here, we propose a viable alternative mechanism for prebiotic systems: autocatalytic selection, in which molecules catalyze reactions and processes that lead to increases in their concentration. Crucially, this provides a driver for increases in concentrations of molecules to a level that permits prebiotic metabolism. We show how this can produce high levels of amino acids, sugar phosphates, nucleotides and lipids and then lead on to polymers. Our outline is supported by a set of guidelines to support the identification of the most likely prebiotic routes. Most of the steps in this pathway are already supported by experimental results. These proposals generate a coherent and viable set of pathways that run from established Hadean geochemistry to the beginning of life.
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Affiliation(s)
- Mike P Williamson
- School of Biosciences, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK
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13
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Barge LM, Fournier GP. Considerations for Detecting Organic Indicators of Metabolism on Enceladus. ASTROBIOLOGY 2024; 24:328-338. [PMID: 38507694 DOI: 10.1089/ast.2023.0074] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 03/22/2024]
Abstract
Enceladus is of interest to astrobiology and the search for life since it is thought to host active hydrothermal activity and habitable conditions. It is also possible that the organics detected on Enceladus may indicate an active prebiotic or biotic system; in particular, the conditions on Enceladus may favor mineral-driven protometabolic reactions. When including metabolism-related biosignatures in Enceladus mission concepts, it is necessary to base these in a clearer understanding of how these signatures could also be produced prebiotically. In addition, postulating which biological metabolisms to look for on Enceladus requires a non-Earth-centric approach since the details of biological metabolic pathways are heavily shaped by adaptation to geochemical conditions over the planet's history. Creating metabolism-related organic detection objectives for Enceladus missions, therefore, requires consideration of how metabolic systems may operate differently on another world, while basing these speculations on observed Earth-specific microbial processes. In addition, advances in origin-of-life research can play a critical role in distinguishing between interpretations of any future organic detections on Enceladus, and the discovery of an extant prebiotic system would be a transformative astrobiological event in its own right.
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Affiliation(s)
- Laura M Barge
- Planetary Science Section, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA
| | - Gregory P Fournier
- Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
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14
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Li Y, Kurokawa H, Sekine Y, Kebukawa Y, Nakano Y, Kitadai N, Zhang N, Zang X, Ueno Y, Fujimori G, Nakamura R, Fujishima K, Isa J. Aqueous breakdown of aspartate and glutamate to n-ω-amino acids on the parent bodies of carbonaceous chondrites and asteroid Ryugu. SCIENCE ADVANCES 2023; 9:eadh7845. [PMID: 38100590 PMCID: PMC10848742 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adh7845] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/14/2023] [Accepted: 11/16/2023] [Indexed: 12/17/2023]
Abstract
Amino acids in carbonaceous chondrites may have seeded the origin of life on Earth and possibly elsewhere. Recently, the return samples from a C-type asteroid Ryugu were found to contain amino acids with a similar distribution to Ivuna-type CI chondrites, suggesting the potential of amino acid abundances as molecular descriptors of parent body geochemistry. However, the chemical mechanisms responsible for the amino acid distributions remain to be elucidated particularly at low temperatures (<50°C). Here, we report that two representative proteinogenic amino acids, aspartic acid and glutamic acid, decompose to β-alanine and γ-aminobutyric acid, respectively, under simulated geoelectrochemical conditions at 25°C. This low-temperature conversion provides a plausible explanation for the enrichment of these two n-ω-amino acids compared to their precursors in heavily aqueously altered CI chondrites and Ryugu's return samples. The results suggest that these heavily aqueously altered samples originated from the water-rich mantle of their water/rock differentiated parent planetesimals where protein α-amino acids were decomposed.
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Affiliation(s)
- Yamei Li
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan
| | - Hiroyuki Kurokawa
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan
- Department of Earth Science and Astronomy, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo, 3-8-1 Komaba, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 153-8902, Japan
| | - Yasuhito Sekine
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan
- Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8551, Japan
- Institute of Nature and Environmental Technology, Japan Kanazawa University, Ishikawa, Kanazawa, Kakumachi 920-1192, Japan
- Planetary Plasma and Atmospheric Research Center, Tohoku University, Aramaki-aza-Aoba 6-3, Aoba, Sendai, Miyagi 980-8578, Japan
| | - Yoko Kebukawa
- Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8551, Japan
- Department of Chemistry and Life Science, Yokohama National University, 79-5 Tokiwadai, Hodogayaku, Yokohama 240-8501, Japan
| | - Yuko Nakano
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan
| | - Norio Kitadai
- Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, 2-15 Natsushima-cho, Yokosuka 237-0061, Japan
| | - Naizhong Zhang
- Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8551, Japan
| | - Xiaofeng Zang
- Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8551, Japan
| | - Yuichiro Ueno
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan
- Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8551, Japan
- Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, 2-15 Natsushima-cho, Yokosuka 237-0061, Japan
| | - Gen Fujimori
- Department of Chemistry and Life Science, Yokohama National University, 79-5 Tokiwadai, Hodogayaku, Yokohama 240-8501, Japan
| | - Ryuhei Nakamura
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan
- Biofunctional Catalyst Research Team, RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science, 2-1 Hirosawa, Wako, Saitama 351-0198, Japan
| | - Kosuke Fujishima
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan
- Graduate School of Media and Governance, Keio University, 5322 Endo, Fujisawa 252-0882, Japan
| | - Junko Isa
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan
- Planetary Exploration Research Center, Chiba Institute of Technology, 2-17-1 Tsudanuma, Narashino, Chiba 275-0016, Japan
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15
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Zimmermann J, Mayer RJ, Moran J. A single phosphorylation mechanism in early metabolism - the case of phosphoenolpyruvate. Chem Sci 2023; 14:14100-14108. [PMID: 38098731 PMCID: PMC10717536 DOI: 10.1039/d3sc04116f] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/07/2023] [Accepted: 11/22/2023] [Indexed: 12/17/2023] Open
Abstract
Phosphorylation is thought to be one of the fundamental reactions for the emergence of metabolism. Nearly all enzymatic phosphorylation reactions in the anabolic core of microbial metabolism act on carboxylates to give acyl phosphates, with a notable exception - the phosphorylation of pyruvate to phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP), which involves an enolate. We wondered whether an ancestral mechanism for the phosphorylation of pyruvate to PEP could also have involved carboxylate phosphorylation rather than the modern enzymatic form. The phosphorylation of pyruvate with P4O10 as a model phosphorylating agent was found to indeed occur via carboxylate phosphorylation, as verified by mechanistic studies using model substrates, time course experiments, liquid and solid-state NMR spectroscopy, and DFT calculations. The in situ generated acyl phosphate subsequently undergoes an intramolecular phosphoryl transfer to yield PEP. A single phosphorylation mechanism acting on carboxylates appears sufficient to initiate metabolic networks that include PEP, strengthening the case that metabolism emerged from self-organized chemistry.
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Affiliation(s)
- Joris Zimmermann
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006, Université de Strasbourg 8 Allée Gaspard Monge 67000 Strasbourg France
| | - Robert J Mayer
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006, Université de Strasbourg 8 Allée Gaspard Monge 67000 Strasbourg France
| | - Joseph Moran
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS), CNRS UMR 7006, Université de Strasbourg 8 Allée Gaspard Monge 67000 Strasbourg France
- Institut Universitaire de France (IUF) France
- Department of Chemistry and Biomolecular Sciences, University of Ottawa Ottawa Ontario K1N 6N5 Canada
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16
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Chen C, Yi R, Igisu M, Sakaguchi C, Afrin R, Potiszil C, Kunihiro T, Kobayashi K, Nakamura E, Ueno Y, Antunes A, Wang A, Chandru K, Hao J, Jia TZ. Spectroscopic and Biophysical Methods to Determine Differential Salt-Uptake by Primitive Membraneless Polyester Microdroplets. SMALL METHODS 2023; 7:e2300119. [PMID: 37203261 DOI: 10.1002/smtd.202300119] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/29/2023] [Revised: 04/23/2023] [Indexed: 05/20/2023]
Abstract
α-Hydroxy acids are prebiotic monomers that undergo dehydration synthesis to form polyester gels, which assemble into membraneless microdroplets upon aqueous rehydration. These microdroplets are proposed as protocells that can segregate and compartmentalize primitive molecules/reactions. Different primitive aqueous environments with a variety of salts could have hosted chemistries that formed polyester microdroplets. These salts could be essential cofactors of compartmentalized prebiotic reactions or even directly affect protocell structure. However, fully understanding polyester-salt interactions remains elusive, partially due to technical challenges of quantitative measurements in condensed phases. Here, spectroscopic and biophysical methods are applied to analyze salt uptake by polyester microdroplets. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry is applied to measure the cation concentration within polyester microdroplets after addition of chloride salts. Combined with methods to determine the effects of salt uptake on droplet turbidity, size, surface potential and internal water distribution, it was observed that polyester microdroplets can selectively partition salt cations, leading to differential microdroplet coalescence due to ionic screening effects reducing electrostatic repulsion forces between microdroplets. Through applying existing techniques to novel analyses related to primitive compartment chemistry and biophysics, this study suggests that even minor differences in analyte uptake can lead to significant protocellular structural change.
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Affiliation(s)
- Chen Chen
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 152-8550, Japan
| | - Ruiqin Yi
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 152-8550, Japan
| | - Motoko Igisu
- Institute for Extra-cutting-edge Science and Technology Avant-garde Research (X-star), Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), Yokosuka, Kanagawa, 237-0061, Japan
| | - Chie Sakaguchi
- The Pheasant Memorial Laboratory for Geochemistry and Cosmochemistry, Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University, Misasa, Tottori, 682-0193, Japan
| | - Rehana Afrin
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 152-8550, Japan
| | - Christian Potiszil
- The Pheasant Memorial Laboratory for Geochemistry and Cosmochemistry, Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University, Misasa, Tottori, 682-0193, Japan
| | - Tak Kunihiro
- The Pheasant Memorial Laboratory for Geochemistry and Cosmochemistry, Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University, Misasa, Tottori, 682-0193, Japan
| | - Katsura Kobayashi
- The Pheasant Memorial Laboratory for Geochemistry and Cosmochemistry, Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University, Misasa, Tottori, 682-0193, Japan
| | - Eizo Nakamura
- The Pheasant Memorial Laboratory for Geochemistry and Cosmochemistry, Institute for Planetary Materials, Okayama University, Misasa, Tottori, 682-0193, Japan
| | - Yuichiro Ueno
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 152-8550, Japan
- Institute for Extra-cutting-edge Science and Technology Avant-garde Research (X-star), Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), Yokosuka, Kanagawa, 237-0061, Japan
- Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 152-8551, Japan
| | - André Antunes
- State Key Laboratory of Lunar and Planetary Sciences, Macau University of Science and Technology (MUST), Taipa, Macau, SAR, China
- Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, Seattle, WA, 98104, USA
| | - Anna Wang
- School of Chemistry, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia
- Australian Centre for Astrobiology, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia
- RNA Institute, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia
- ARC Centre of Excellence for Synthetic Biology, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia
| | - Kuhan Chandru
- Space Science Center (ANGKASA), Institute of Climate Change, National University of Malaysia, Selangor, 43650, Malaysia
| | - Jihua Hao
- Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, Seattle, WA, 98104, USA
- Deep Space Exploration Laboratory/CAS Laboratory of Crust-Mantle Materials and Environments, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, 230026, China
| | - Tony Z Jia
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 152-8550, Japan
- Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, Seattle, WA, 98104, USA
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17
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Gaudu N, Farr O, Ona-Nguema G, Duval S. Dissolved metal ions and mineral-liposome hybrid systems: Underlying interactions, synthesis, and characterization. Biochimie 2023; 215:100-112. [PMID: 37699473 DOI: 10.1016/j.biochi.2023.09.009] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/07/2023] [Revised: 07/19/2023] [Accepted: 09/05/2023] [Indexed: 09/14/2023]
Abstract
Liposomes are versatile lipid-based vesicles with interesting physicochemical properties, making them excellent candidates for interdisciplinary applications in the medicinal, biological, and environmental sciences. The synthesis of mineral-liposome hybrid systems lends normally inert vesicles with the catalytic, magnetic, electrical, and optical properties of the integrated mineral species. Such applications require an understanding of the physicochemical interactions between organic molecules and inorganic crystal structures. This review provides an overview on these interactions and details on synthesis and characterization methods for these systems.
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Affiliation(s)
- Nil Gaudu
- Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (BIP), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7281 IMM-CNRS, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13400, Marseille, France.
| | - Orion Farr
- Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (BIP), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7281 IMM-CNRS, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13400, Marseille, France; Centre Interdisciplinaire des Nanosciences de Marseille (CINaM), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7325 CNRS, Campus de Luminy, 13288, Marseille, France
| | - Georges Ona-Nguema
- Sorbonne Université - CNRS UMR 7590 - Muséum National D'Histoire Naturelle - IRD UMR 206, Institut de Minéralogie, de Physique des Matériaux et de Cosmochimie (IMPMC), Faculté des Sciences et Ingénierie, Campus Pierre & Marie Curie, 4 Place Jussieu, F-75005, Paris, France
| | - Simon Duval
- Laboratoire de Bioénergétique et Ingénierie des Protéines (BIP), Aix-Marseille Université, UMR 7281 IMM-CNRS, 31 Chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13400, Marseille, France
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18
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Nogal N, Sanz-Sánchez M, Vela-Gallego S, Ruiz-Mirazo K, de la Escosura A. The protometabolic nature of prebiotic chemistry. Chem Soc Rev 2023; 52:7359-7388. [PMID: 37855729 PMCID: PMC10614573 DOI: 10.1039/d3cs00594a] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/28/2023] [Indexed: 10/20/2023]
Abstract
The field of prebiotic chemistry has been dedicated over decades to finding abiotic routes towards the molecular components of life. There is nowadays a handful of prebiotically plausible scenarios that enable the laboratory synthesis of most amino acids, fatty acids, simple sugars, nucleotides and core metabolites of extant living organisms. The major bottleneck then seems to be the self-organization of those building blocks into systems that can self-sustain. The purpose of this tutorial review is having a close look, guided by experimental research, into the main synthetic pathways of prebiotic chemistry, suggesting how they could be wired through common intermediates and catalytic cycles, as well as how recursively changing conditions could help them engage in self-organized and dissipative networks/assemblies (i.e., systems that consume chemical or physical energy from their environment to maintain their internal organization in a dynamic steady state out of equilibrium). In the article we also pay attention to the implications of this view for the emergence of homochirality. The revealed connectivity between those prebiotic routes should constitute the basis for a robust research program towards the bottom-up implementation of protometabolic systems, taken as a central part of the origins-of-life problem. In addition, this approach should foster further exploration of control mechanisms to tame the combinatorial explosion that typically occurs in mixtures of various reactive precursors, thus regulating the functional integration of their respective chemistries into self-sustaining protocellular assemblies.
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Affiliation(s)
- Noemí Nogal
- Department of Organic Chemistry, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Campus Cantoblanco, 28049, Madrid, Spain.
| | - Marcos Sanz-Sánchez
- Department of Organic Chemistry, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Campus Cantoblanco, 28049, Madrid, Spain.
| | - Sonia Vela-Gallego
- Department of Organic Chemistry, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Campus Cantoblanco, 28049, Madrid, Spain.
| | - Kepa Ruiz-Mirazo
- Biofisika Institute (CSIC, UPV/EHU), University of the Basque Country, Leioa, Spain
- Department of Philosophy, University of the Basque Country, Leioa, Spain
| | - Andrés de la Escosura
- Department of Organic Chemistry, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Campus Cantoblanco, 28049, Madrid, Spain.
- Institute for Advanced Research in Chemistry (IAdChem), Campus de Cantoblanco, 28049, Madrid, Spain
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19
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Weingart M, Chen S, Donat C, Helmbrecht V, Orsi WD, Braun D, Alim K. Alkaline vents recreated in two dimensions to study pH gradients, precipitation morphology, and molecule accumulation. SCIENCE ADVANCES 2023; 9:eadi1884. [PMID: 37774032 PMCID: PMC10541008 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adi1884] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/24/2023] [Accepted: 08/30/2023] [Indexed: 10/01/2023]
Abstract
Alkaline vents (AVs) are hypothesized to have been a setting for the emergence of life, by creating strong gradients across inorganic membranes within chimney structures. In the past, three-dimensional chimney structures were formed under laboratory conditions; however, no in situ visualization or testing of the gradients was possible. We develop a quasi-two-dimensional microfluidic model of AVs that allows spatiotemporal visualization of mineral precipitation in low-volume experiments. Upon injection of an alkaline fluid into an acidic, iron-rich solution, we observe a diverse set of precipitation morphologies, mainly controlled by flow rate and ion concentration. Using microscope imaging and pH-dependent dyes, we show that finger-like precipitates can facilitate formation and maintenance of microscale pH gradients and accumulation of dispersed particles in confined geometries. Our findings establish a model to investigate the potential of gradients across a semipermeable boundary for early compartmentalization, accumulation, and chemical reactions at the origins of life.
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Affiliation(s)
- Maximilian Weingart
- Systems Biophysics and Center for NanoScience (CeNS), Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich, Amalienstraße 54, 80799 München, Germany
| | - Siyu Chen
- Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Am Faßberg 17, 37077 Göttingen, Germany
| | - Clara Donat
- TUM School of Natural Sciences, Department of Bioscience; Center for Protein Assemblies (CPA), Technical University of Munich, Ernst-Otto-Fischer-Str. 8, 85748 Garching b. München, Germany
| | - Vanessa Helmbrecht
- Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich, Richard-Wagner Straße 10, 80333 München, Germany
| | - William D. Orsi
- Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich, Richard-Wagner Straße 10, 80333 München, Germany
- GeoBio-CenterLMU, Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich, Richard-Wagner Straße 10, 80333 München, Germany
| | - Dieter Braun
- Systems Biophysics and Center for NanoScience (CeNS), Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich, Amalienstraße 54, 80799 München, Germany
| | - Karen Alim
- Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Am Faßberg 17, 37077 Göttingen, Germany
- TUM School of Natural Sciences, Department of Bioscience; Center for Protein Assemblies (CPA), Technical University of Munich, Ernst-Otto-Fischer-Str. 8, 85748 Garching b. München, Germany
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20
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de Graaf R, De Decker Y, Sojo V, Hudson R. Quantifying Catalysis at the Origin of Life. Chemistry 2023; 29:e202301447. [PMID: 37578090 DOI: 10.1002/chem.202301447] [Citation(s) in RCA: 6] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/05/2023] [Indexed: 08/15/2023]
Abstract
The construction of hypothetical environments to produce organic molecules such as metabolic intermediates or amino acids is the subject of ongoing research into the emergence of life. Experiments specifically focused on an anabolic approach typically rely on a mineral catalyst to facilitate the supply of organics that may have produced prebiotic building blocks for life. Alternatively to a true catalytic system, a mineral could be sacrificially oxidized in the production of organics, necessitating the emergent 'life' to turn to virgin materials for each iteration of metabolic processes. The aim of this perspective is to view the current 'metabolism-first' literature through the lens of materials chemistry to evaluate the need for higher catalytic activity and materials analyses. While many elegant studies have detailed the production of chemical building blocks under geologically plausible and biologically relevant conditions, few appear to do so with sub-stoichiometric amounts of metals or minerals. Moving toward sub-stoichiometric metals with rigorous materials analyses is necessary to demonstrate the viability of an elusive cornerstone of the 'metabolism-first' hypotheses: catalysis. We emphasize that future work should aim to demonstrate decreased catalyst loading, increased productivity, and/or rigorous materials analyses for evidence of true catalysis.
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Affiliation(s)
- Ruvan de Graaf
- Department of Chemistry, College of the Atlantic, 105 Eden Street, Bar Harbor, Maine, 04609, USA
| | - Yannick De Decker
- Center for Nonlinear Phenomena and Complex Systems, Université libre de Bruxelles, CP 231, 1050, Ixelles, Belgium
| | - Victor Sojo
- Institute for Comparative Genomics & Richard Gilder Graduate School, Université libre de Bruxelles, American Museum of Natural History, 79th Street at Central Park West. New York, NY, 10024-5192, USA
| | - Reuben Hudson
- Department of Chemistry, College of the Atlantic, 105 Eden Street, Bar Harbor, Maine, 04609, USA
- Department of Chemistry, Colby College, 4000 Mayflower Hill Drive, Waterville, Maine, 04901, USA
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21
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Farr O, Gaudu N, Danger G, Russell MJ, Ferry D, Nitschke W, Duval S. Methanol on the rocks: green rust transformation promotes the oxidation of methane. J R Soc Interface 2023; 20:20230386. [PMID: 37727071 PMCID: PMC10509593 DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2023.0386] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/07/2023] [Accepted: 08/30/2023] [Indexed: 09/21/2023] Open
Abstract
Shared coordination geometries between metal ions within reactive minerals and enzymatic metal cofactors hints at mechanistic and possibly evolutionary homology between particular abiotic chemical mineralogies and biological metabolism. The octahedral coordination of reactive Fe2+/3+ minerals such as green rusts, endemic to anoxic sediments and the early Earth's oceans, mirrors the di-iron reaction centre of soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO), responsible for methane oxidation in methanotrophy. We show that methane oxidation occurs in tandem with the oxidation of green rust to lepidocrocite and magnetite, mimicking radical-mediated methane oxidation found in sMMO to yield not only methanol but also halogenated hydrocarbons in the presence of seawater. This naturally occurring geochemical pathway for CH4 oxidation elucidates a previously unidentified carbon cycling mechanism in modern and ancient environments and reveals clues into mineral-mediated reactions in the synthesis of organic compounds necessary for the emergence of life.
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Affiliation(s)
- Orion Farr
- CNRS, CINaM, Aix-Marseille Univ, 13009 Marseille, France
- CNRS, BIP (UMR 7281), Aix Marseille Univ, Marseille, France
| | - Nil Gaudu
- CNRS, BIP (UMR 7281), Aix Marseille Univ, Marseille, France
| | | | | | - Daniel Ferry
- CNRS, CINaM, Aix-Marseille Univ, 13009 Marseille, France
| | | | - Simon Duval
- CNRS, BIP (UMR 7281), Aix Marseille Univ, Marseille, France
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22
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Holler S, Bartlett S, Löffler RJG, Casiraghi F, Diaz CIS, Cartwright JHE, Hanczyc MM. Hybrid organic-inorganic structures trigger the formation of primitive cell-like compartments. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2023; 120:e2300491120. [PMID: 37561785 PMCID: PMC10438843 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2300491120] [Citation(s) in RCA: 3] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/19/2023] [Accepted: 07/07/2023] [Indexed: 08/12/2023] Open
Abstract
Alkaline hydrothermal vents have become a candidate setting for the origins of life on Earth and beyond. This is due to several key features including the presence of gradients of temperature, redox potential, pH, the availability of inorganic minerals, and the existence of a network of inorganic pore spaces that could have served as primitive compartments. Chemical gardens have long been used as experimental proxies for hydrothermal vents. This paper investigates-10pc]Please note that the spelling of the following author name in the manuscript differs from the spelling provided in the article metadata: Richard J. G. Löffler. The spelling provided in the manuscript has been retained; please confirm. a set of prebiotic interactions between such inorganic structures and fatty alcohols. The integration of a medium-chain fatty alcohol, decanol, within these inorganic minerals, produced a range of emergent 3 dimensions structures at both macroscopic and microscopic scales. Fatty alcohols can be considered plausible prebiotic amphiphiles that might have assisted the formation of protocellular structures such as vesicles. The experiments presented herein show that neither chemical gardens nor decanol alone promote vesicle formation, but chemical gardens grown in the presence of decanol, which is then integrated into inorganic mineral structures, support vesicle formation. These observations suggest that the interaction of fatty alcohols and inorganic mineral structures could have played an important role in the emergence of protocells, yielding support for the evolution of living cells.
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Affiliation(s)
- Silvia Holler
- Cellular, Computational and Integrative Biology Department, Laboratory for Artificial Biology, University of Trento, Povo38123, Italy
| | - Stuart Bartlett
- Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA91125
| | - Richard J. G. Löffler
- Cellular, Computational and Integrative Biology Department, Laboratory for Artificial Biology, University of Trento, Povo38123, Italy
| | - Federica Casiraghi
- Cellular, Computational and Integrative Biology Department, Laboratory for Artificial Biology, University of Trento, Povo38123, Italy
| | - Claro Ignacio Sainz Diaz
- Instituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas–Universidad de Granada, Armilla, Granada18100, Spain
| | - Julyan H. E. Cartwright
- Instituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas–Universidad de Granada, Armilla, Granada18100, Spain
- Instituto Carlos I de Física Teórica y Computacional, Universidad de Granada, Granada18071, Spain
| | - Martin M. Hanczyc
- Cellular, Computational and Integrative Biology Department, Laboratory for Artificial Biology, University of Trento, Povo38123, Italy
- Chemical and Biological Engineering, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM87106
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23
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Sturtz M, House C. Metal Catalysis Acting on Nitriles in Early Earth Hydrothermal Systems. Life (Basel) 2023; 13:1524. [PMID: 37511899 PMCID: PMC10381589 DOI: 10.3390/life13071524] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/05/2023] [Revised: 06/27/2023] [Accepted: 07/05/2023] [Indexed: 07/30/2023] Open
Abstract
Hydrothermal systems are areas in which heated fluids and organic molecules rush through basaltic material rich in metals and minerals. By studying malononitrile and acetonitrile, we examine the effects of metal and mineral nanoparticles on nitrile compounds in anoxic, hydrothermal conditions representing a prebiotic environment of early Earth. Polymerization, reduction, cyclization, and a phenomenon colloquially known as 'chemical gardening' (structure building via reprecipitation of metal compounds or complexing with organics) are all potential outcomes with the addition of metals and minerals. Reduction occurs with the addition of rhodium (Rh) or iron (II) sulfide (FeS), with positive identification of ethanol and ethylamine forming from acetonitrile reduction. We find that polymerization and insoluble product formation were associated with oxide minerals, metallic nickel (Ni), and metallic cobalt (Co) acting as catalysts. Oxide minerals strongly promoted polymerization into insoluble, tar-like products of nitriles. FeS, iron-nickel alloy (FeNi), and rhodium are unique cases that appear to act as reagents by actively participating in chemical gardening without returning to their initial state. Further, FeS tentatively had a phase change into the mineral parabutlerite. This research aims to identify metals and metal minerals that could best serve nitrile catalysis and reactions on early Earth.
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Affiliation(s)
- Miranda Sturtz
- Department of Geosciences, Pennsylvania State University, 116 Deike Building, University Park, PA 16802, USA
| | - Christopher House
- Department of Geosciences, Pennsylvania State University, 116 Deike Building, University Park, PA 16802, USA
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24
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Peters S, Semenov DA, Hochleitner R, Trapp O. Synthesis of prebiotic organics from CO 2 by catalysis with meteoritic and volcanic particles. Sci Rep 2023; 13:6843. [PMID: 37231067 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-33741-8] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/20/2022] [Accepted: 04/18/2023] [Indexed: 05/27/2023] Open
Abstract
The emergence of prebiotic organics was a mandatory step toward the origin of life. The significance of the exogenous delivery versus the in-situ synthesis from atmospheric gases is still under debate. We experimentally demonstrate that iron-rich meteoritic and volcanic particles activate and catalyse the fixation of CO2, yielding the key precursors of life-building blocks. This catalysis is robust and produces selectively aldehydes, alcohols, and hydrocarbons, independent of the redox state of the environment. It is facilitated by common minerals and tolerates a broad range of the early planetary conditions (150-300 °C, ≲ 10-50 bar, wet or dry climate). We find that up to 6 × 108 kg/year of prebiotic organics could have been synthesized by this planetary-scale process from the atmospheric CO2 on Hadean Earth.
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Affiliation(s)
- Sophia Peters
- Department of Chemistry, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Butenandtstr. 5-13, 81377, Munich, Germany
- Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Königstuhl 17, 69117, Heidelberg, Germany
| | - Dmitry A Semenov
- Department of Chemistry, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Butenandtstr. 5-13, 81377, Munich, Germany
- Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Königstuhl 17, 69117, Heidelberg, Germany
| | - Rupert Hochleitner
- Mineralogische Staatssammlung München, Theresienstr. 41, 80333, Munich, Germany
| | - Oliver Trapp
- Department of Chemistry, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Butenandtstr. 5-13, 81377, Munich, Germany.
- Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Königstuhl 17, 69117, Heidelberg, Germany.
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25
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Russell MJ. A self-sustaining serpentinization mega-engine feeds the fougerite nanoengines implicated in the emergence of guided metabolism. Front Microbiol 2023; 14:1145915. [PMID: 37275164 PMCID: PMC10236563 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2023.1145915] [Citation(s) in RCA: 6] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/16/2023] [Accepted: 03/22/2023] [Indexed: 06/07/2023] Open
Abstract
The demonstration by Ivan Barnes et al. that the serpentinization of fresh Alpine-type ultramafic rocks results in the exhalation of hot alkaline fluids is foundational to the submarine alkaline vent theory (AVT) for life's emergence to its 'improbable' thermodynamic state. In AVT, such alkaline fluids ≤ 150°C, bearing H2 > CH4 > HS--generated and driven convectively by a serpentinizing exothermic mega-engine operating in the ultramafic crust-exhale into the iron-rich, CO2> > > NO3--bearing Hadean ocean to result in hydrothermal precipitate mounds comprising macromolecular ferroferric-carbonate oxyhydroxide and minor sulfide. As the nanocrystalline minerals fougerite/green rust and mackinawite (FeS), they compose the spontaneously precipitated inorganic membranes that keep the highly contrasting solutions apart, thereby maintaining redox and pH disequilibria. They do so in the form of fine chimneys and chemical gardens. The same disequilibria drive the reduction of CO2 to HCOO- or CO, and the oxidation of CH4 to a methyl group-the two products reacting to form acetate in a sequence antedating the 'energy-producing' acetyl coenzyme-A pathway. Fougerite is a 2D-layered mineral in which the hydrous interlayers themselves harbor 2D solutions, in effect constricted to ~ 1D by preferentially directed electron hopping/tunneling, and proton Gröthuss 'bucket-brigading' when subject to charge. As a redox-driven nanoengine or peristaltic pump, fougerite forces the ordered reduction of nitrate to ammonium, the amination of pyruvate and oxalate to alanine and glycine, and their condensation to short peptides. In turn, these peptides have the flexibility to sequester the founding inorganic iron oxyhydroxide, sulfide, and pyrophosphate clusters, to produce metal- and phosphate-dosed organic films and cells. As the feed to the hydrothermal mound fails, the only equivalent sustenance on offer to the first autotrophs is the still mildly serpentinizing upper crust beneath. While the conditions here are very much less bountiful, they do offer the similar feed and disequilibria the survivors are accustomed to. Sometime during this transition, a replicating non-ribosomal guidance system is discovered to provide the rules to take on the incrementally changing surroundings. The details of how these replicating apparatuses emerged are the hard problem, but by doing so the progenote archaea and bacteria could begin to colonize what would become the deep biosphere. Indeed, that the anaerobic nitrate-respiring methanotrophic archaea and the deep-branching Acetothermia presently comprise a portion of that microbiome occupying serpentinizing rocks offers circumstantial support for this notion. However, the inescapable, if jarring conclusion is drawn that, absent fougerite/green rust, there would be no structured channelway to life.
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Affiliation(s)
- Michael J. Russell
- Dipartimento di Chimica, Università degli Studi di Torino, Torino, Italy
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26
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Harrison SA, Webb WL, Rammu H, Lane N. Prebiotic Synthesis of Aspartate Using Life's Metabolism as a Guide. Life (Basel) 2023; 13:life13051177. [PMID: 37240822 DOI: 10.3390/life13051177] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/10/2023] [Revised: 04/29/2023] [Accepted: 05/10/2023] [Indexed: 05/28/2023] Open
Abstract
A protometabolic approach to the origins of life assumes that the conserved biochemistry of metabolism has direct continuity with prebiotic chemistry. One of the most important amino acids in modern biology is aspartic acid, serving as a nodal metabolite for the synthesis of many other essential biomolecules. Aspartate's prebiotic synthesis is complicated by the instability of its precursor, oxaloacetate. In this paper, we show that the use of the biologically relevant cofactor pyridoxamine, supported by metal ion catalysis, is sufficiently fast to offset oxaloacetate's degradation. Cu2+-catalysed transamination of oxaloacetate by pyridoxamine achieves around a 5% yield within 1 h, and can operate across a broad range of pH, temperature, and pressure. In addition, the synthesis of the downstream product β-alanine may also take place in the same reaction system at very low yields, directly mimicking an archaeal synthesis route. Amino group transfer supported by pyridoxal is shown to take place from aspartate to alanine, but the reverse reaction (alanine to aspartate) shows a poor yield. Overall, our results show that the nodal metabolite aspartate and related amino acids can indeed be synthesised via protometabolic pathways that foreshadow modern metabolism in the presence of the simple cofactor pyridoxamine and metal ions.
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Affiliation(s)
- Stuart A Harrison
- Centre for Life's Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - William L Webb
- Centre for Life's Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Hanadi Rammu
- Centre for Life's Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Nick Lane
- Centre for Life's Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
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27
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Green NJ, Russell DA, Tanner SH, Sutherland JD. Prebiotic Synthesis of N-Formylaminonitriles and Derivatives in Formamide. J Am Chem Soc 2023; 145:10533-10541. [PMID: 37146260 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c13306] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/07/2023]
Abstract
Amino acids and their derivatives were probably instrumental in the transition of prebiotic chemistry to early biology. Accordingly, amino acid formation under prebiotic conditions has been intensively investigated. Unsurprisingly, most of these studies have taken place with water as the solvent. Herein, we describe an investigation into the formation and subsequent reactions of aminonitriles and their formylated derivatives in formamide. We find that N-formylaminonitriles form readily from aldehydes and cyanide in formamide, even in the absence of added ammonia, suggesting a potentially prebiotic source of amino acid derivatives. Alkaline processing of N-formylaminonitriles proceeds with hydration at the nitrile group faster than deformylation, protecting aminonitrile derivatives from reversion of the Strecker condensation equilibrium during hydration/hydrolysis and furnishing mixtures of N-formylated and unformylated amino acid derivatives. Furthermore, the facile synthesis of N-formyldehydroalanine nitrile is observed in formamide from glycolaldehyde and cyanide without intervention. Dehydroalanine derivatives have been proposed as important compounds for prebiotic peptide synthesis, and we demonstrate both a synthesis suggesting that they are potentially plausible components of a prebiotic inventory, and reactions showing their utility as abiotic precursors to a range of compounds of prebiological interest.
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Affiliation(s)
- Nicholas J Green
- MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Francis Crick Avenue, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge CB2 0QH, U.K
- Department of Chemistry, University of Otago, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand
| | - David A Russell
- MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Francis Crick Avenue, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge CB2 0QH, U.K
| | - Sasha H Tanner
- Department of Chemistry, University of Otago, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand
| | - John D Sutherland
- MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Francis Crick Avenue, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge CB2 0QH, U.K
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28
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Halpern A, Bartsch LR, Ibrahim K, Harrison SA, Ahn M, Christodoulou J, Lane N. Biophysical Interactions Underpin the Emergence of Information in the Genetic Code. Life (Basel) 2023; 13:1129. [PMID: 37240774 PMCID: PMC10221087 DOI: 10.3390/life13051129] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/04/2023] [Revised: 04/25/2023] [Accepted: 04/30/2023] [Indexed: 05/28/2023] Open
Abstract
The genetic code conceals a 'code within the codons', which hints at biophysical interactions between amino acids and their cognate nucleotides. Yet, research over decades has failed to corroborate systematic biophysical interactions across the code. Using molecular dynamics simulations and NMR, we have analysed interactions between the 20 standard proteinogenic amino acids and 4 RNA mononucleotides in 3 charge states. Our simulations show that 50% of amino acids bind best with their anticodonic middle base in the -1 charge state common to the backbone of RNA, while 95% of amino acids interact most strongly with at least 1 of their codonic or anticodonic bases. Preference for the cognate anticodonic middle base was greater than 99% of randomised assignments. We verify a selection of our results using NMR, and highlight challenges with both techniques for interrogating large numbers of weak interactions. Finally, we extend our simulations to a range of amino acids and dinucleotides, and corroborate similar preferences for cognate nucleotides. Despite some discrepancies between the predicted patterns and those observed in biology, the existence of weak stereochemical interactions means that random RNA sequences could template non-random peptides. This offers a compelling explanation for the emergence of genetic information in biology.
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Affiliation(s)
- Aaron Halpern
- UCL Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Lilly R. Bartsch
- UCL Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Kaan Ibrahim
- UCL Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Stuart A. Harrison
- UCL Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Minkoo Ahn
- Department of Structural and Molecular Biology, Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology (ISMB), University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - John Christodoulou
- Department of Structural and Molecular Biology, Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology (ISMB), University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Nick Lane
- UCL Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK
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29
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Catalytic conversion of biomass-derived compoUnds to various amino acids: status and perspectives. Front Chem Sci Eng 2023. [DOI: 10.1007/s11705-022-2254-z] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 03/06/2023]
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30
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Aithal A, Dagar S, Rajamani S. Metals in Prebiotic Catalysis: A Possible Evolutionary Pathway for the Emergence of Metalloproteins. ACS OMEGA 2023; 8:5197-5208. [PMID: 36816708 PMCID: PMC9933472 DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.2c07635] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 11/29/2022] [Accepted: 01/12/2023] [Indexed: 06/07/2023]
Abstract
Proteinaceous catalysts found in extant biology are products of life that were potentially derived through prolonged periods of evolution. Given their complexity, it is reasonable to assume that they were not accessible to prebiotic chemistry as such. Nevertheless, the dependence of many enzymes on metal ions or metal-ligand cores suggests that catalysis relevant to biology could also be possible with just the metal centers. Given their availability on the Hadean/Archean Earth, it is fair to conjecture that metal ions could have constituted the first forms of catalysts. A slow increase of complexity that was facilitated through the provision of organic ligands and amino acids/peptides possibly allowed for further evolution and diversification, eventually demarcating them into specific functions. Herein, we summarize some key experimental developments and observations that support the possible roles of metal catalysts in shaping the origins of life. Further, we also discuss how they could have evolved into modern-day enzymes, with some suggestions for what could be the imminent next steps that researchers can pursue, to delineate the putative sequence of catalyst evolution during the early stages of life.
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Affiliation(s)
- Anuraag Aithal
- Department
of Biology, Indian Institute of Science
Education and Research, Pune, Maharashtra 411008, India
| | - Shikha Dagar
- Department
of Biology, Indian Institute of Science
Education and Research, Pune, Maharashtra 411008, India
| | - Sudha Rajamani
- Department
of Biology, Indian Institute of Science
Education and Research, Pune, Maharashtra 411008, India
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31
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Cheng X, Huang J, Wang R, Xu Y, Wu N, Zhou J, Liu X, Wang H, Chen H. Inorganic-organic coprecipitation: spontaneous formation of enclosed and porous silica compartments with enriched biopolymers. NANOSCALE 2023; 15:2394-2401. [PMID: 36651126 DOI: 10.1039/d2nr05320a] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 06/17/2023]
Abstract
We show that it is possible to spontaneously form all-enclosed compartments with microporous shells and enriched biopolymers via simple coprecipitation of silica and biopolymers. The reaction involves mild conditions and tolerates the random mixing of multiple reagents. Such a synthetic advance points to a new direction for resolving the chicken-egg dilemma of how the early life forms were hosted: without a physical barrier it would be difficult to maintain organized reactions, but without organized reactions, it would be difficult to create a cell membrane. In our synthesis, the divalent cation Ca2+ plays a critical role in the co-precipitation and in creating hollow compartments after simple dilution with water. The precursor of silica, poly(silicic acid), is a negatively charged, cross-linked polymer. It could be co-precipitated with negatively charged biopolymers such as DNA and proteins, whereas the remaining silica precursor forms a conformal and microporous shell on the surface of the initial precipitate. After etching, the biopolymers are retained inside the hollow compartments. The fact that multiple favorable conditions are easily brought together in enclosed compartments opens new possibilities in theorizing the host of early life forms.
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Affiliation(s)
- Xuejun Cheng
- Department of Chemistry, School of Science, Westlake University, 18 Shilongshan Road, Hangzhou 310024, Zhejiang Province, China.
- Institute of Natural Sciences, Westlake Institute for Advanced Study, 18 Shilongshan Road, Hangzhou 310024, Zhejiang Province, China
| | - Jie Huang
- Institute of Advanced Synthesis (IAS) and School of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Jiangsu National Synergetic Innovation Centre for Advanced Materials, Nanjing Tech University, Nanjing 211816, China.
| | - Ruoxu Wang
- Department of Chemistry, School of Science, Westlake University, 18 Shilongshan Road, Hangzhou 310024, Zhejiang Province, China.
- Institute of Natural Sciences, Westlake Institute for Advanced Study, 18 Shilongshan Road, Hangzhou 310024, Zhejiang Province, China
| | - Yue Xu
- Institute of Advanced Synthesis (IAS) and School of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Jiangsu National Synergetic Innovation Centre for Advanced Materials, Nanjing Tech University, Nanjing 211816, China.
| | - Nan Wu
- State Key Laboratory of Materials Oriented Chemical Engineering, College of Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Engineering, Nanjing Tech University, Nanjing 211800, China.
| | - Jie Zhou
- State Key Laboratory of Materials Oriented Chemical Engineering, College of Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Engineering, Nanjing Tech University, Nanjing 211800, China.
| | - Xueyang Liu
- Institute of Advanced Synthesis (IAS) and School of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Jiangsu National Synergetic Innovation Centre for Advanced Materials, Nanjing Tech University, Nanjing 211816, China.
| | - Hong Wang
- Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China.
| | - Hongyu Chen
- Department of Chemistry, School of Science, Westlake University, 18 Shilongshan Road, Hangzhou 310024, Zhejiang Province, China.
- Institute of Natural Sciences, Westlake Institute for Advanced Study, 18 Shilongshan Road, Hangzhou 310024, Zhejiang Province, China
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32
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Zhao W, Zhong B, Zheng L, Tan P, Wang Y, Leng H, de Souza N, Liu Z, Hong L, Xiao X. Proteome-wide 3D structure prediction provides insights into the ancestral metabolism of ancient archaea and bacteria. Nat Commun 2022; 13:7861. [PMID: 36543797 PMCID: PMC9772386 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-35523-8] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/21/2022] [Accepted: 12/07/2022] [Indexed: 12/24/2022] Open
Abstract
Ancestral metabolism has remained controversial due to a lack of evidence beyond sequence-based reconstructions. Although prebiotic chemists have provided hints that metabolism might originate from non-enzymatic protometabolic pathways, gaps between ancestral reconstruction and prebiotic processes mean there is much that is still unknown. Here, we apply proteome-wide 3D structure predictions and comparisons to investigate ancestorial metabolism of ancient bacteria and archaea, to provide information beyond sequence as a bridge to the prebiotic processes. We compare representative bacterial and archaeal strains, which reveal surprisingly similar physiological and metabolic characteristics via microbiological and biophysical experiments. Pairwise comparison of protein structures identify the conserved metabolic modules in bacteria and archaea, despite interference from overly variable sequences. The conserved modules (for example, middle of glycolysis, partial TCA, proton/sulfur respiration, building block biosynthesis) constitute the basic functions that possibly existed in the archaeal-bacterial common ancestor, which are remarkably consistent with the experimentally confirmed protometabolic pathways. These structure-based findings provide a new perspective to reconstructing the ancestral metabolism and understanding its origin, which suggests high-throughput protein 3D structure prediction is a promising approach, deserving broader application in future ancestral exploration.
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Affiliation(s)
- Weishu Zhao
- State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, International Center for Deep Life Investigation (IC-DLI), School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China
| | - Bozitao Zhong
- State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, International Center for Deep Life Investigation (IC-DLI), School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China
- Institute of Natural Sciences, Shanghai National Center for Applied Mathematics (SJTU Center) and MOE-LSC, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China
| | - Lirong Zheng
- Institute of Natural Sciences, Shanghai National Center for Applied Mathematics (SJTU Center) and MOE-LSC, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China
| | - Pan Tan
- Institute of Natural Sciences, Shanghai National Center for Applied Mathematics (SJTU Center) and MOE-LSC, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China
| | - Yinzhao Wang
- State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, International Center for Deep Life Investigation (IC-DLI), School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China
| | - Hao Leng
- State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, International Center for Deep Life Investigation (IC-DLI), School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China
| | - Nicolas de Souza
- Australian Nuclear Science and Technology (ANSTO), Locked Bag 2001, Kirrawee DC, Sydney, NSW, 2232, Australia
| | - Zhuo Liu
- Institute of Natural Sciences, Shanghai National Center for Applied Mathematics (SJTU Center) and MOE-LSC, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China
- Shanghai Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, 200232, Shanghai, China
- School of Physics and Astronomy, Zhangjiang Institute for Advanced Study, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China
| | - Liang Hong
- Institute of Natural Sciences, Shanghai National Center for Applied Mathematics (SJTU Center) and MOE-LSC, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China.
- Shanghai Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, 200232, Shanghai, China.
- School of Physics and Astronomy, Zhangjiang Institute for Advanced Study, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China.
| | - Xiang Xiao
- State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, International Center for Deep Life Investigation (IC-DLI), School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, 200240, Shanghai, China.
- Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai), Zhuhai, Guangdong, China.
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33
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The Effects of Iron on In Silico Simulated Abiotic Reaction Networks. MOLECULES (BASEL, SWITZERLAND) 2022; 27:molecules27248870. [PMID: 36558002 PMCID: PMC9787479 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27248870] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Figures] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 10/13/2022] [Revised: 12/02/2022] [Accepted: 12/07/2022] [Indexed: 12/15/2022]
Abstract
Iron is one of the most abundant elements in the Universe and Earth's surfaces, and undergoes a redox change of approximately 0.77 mV in changing between its +2 and +3 states. Many contemporary terrestrial organisms are deeply connected to inorganic geochemistry via exploitation of this redox change, and iron redox reactions and catalysis are known to cause significant changes in the course of complex abiotic reactions. These observations point to the question of whether iron may have steered prebiotic chemistry during the emergence of life. Using kinetically naive in silico reaction modeling we explored the potential effects of iron ions on complex reaction networks of prebiotic interest, namely the formose reaction, the complexifying degradation reaction of pyruvic acid in water, glucose degradation, and the Maillard reaction. We find that iron ions produce significant changes in the connectivity of various known diversity-generating reaction networks of proposed prebiotic significance, generally significantly diversifying novel molecular products by ~20%, but also adding the potential for kinetic effects that could allow iron to steer prebiotic chemistry in marked ways.
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34
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Mayer RJ, Moran J. Quantifying Reductive Amination in Nonenzymatic Amino Acid Synthesis. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 2022; 61:e202212237. [PMID: 36121198 PMCID: PMC9828492 DOI: 10.1002/anie.202212237] [Citation(s) in RCA: 14] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/18/2022] [Indexed: 01/12/2023]
Abstract
Amino acid biosynthesis initiates with the reductive amination of α-ketoglutarate with ammonia to produce glutamate. However, the other α-keto acids derived from the glyoxylate and Krebs cycles are converted into amino acids by transamination, rather than by reductive amination. Why is only one amino acid synthesized by reductive amination and not the others? To explore this question, we quantified the inherent reactivities of keto acids in nonenzymatic reduction and reductive amination by using BH3 CN- as a model nucleophile. Biological α-keto acids were found to show pronounced nonenzymatic reactivity differences for the formation of amino acids (α-ketoglutarate
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Affiliation(s)
- Robert J. Mayer
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS)CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
| | - Joseph Moran
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS)CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
- Institut Universitaire de France (IUF)75005ParisFrance
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35
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Nunes Palmeira R, Colnaghi M, Harrison SA, Pomiankowski A, Lane N. The limits of metabolic heredity in protocells. Proc Biol Sci 2022; 289:20221469. [PMID: 36350219 PMCID: PMC9653231 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2022.1469] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/11/2022] Open
Abstract
The universal core of metabolism could have emerged from thermodynamically favoured prebiotic pathways at the origin of life. Starting with H
2
and CO
2
, the synthesis of amino acids and mixed fatty acids, which self-assemble into protocells, is favoured under warm anoxic conditions. Here, we address whether it is possible for protocells to evolve greater metabolic complexity, through positive feedbacks involving nucleotide catalysis. Using mathematical simulations to model metabolic heredity in protocells, based on branch points in protometabolic flux, we show that nucleotide catalysis can indeed promote protocell growth. This outcome only occurs when nucleotides directly catalyse CO
2
fixation. Strong nucleotide catalysis of other pathways (e.g. fatty acids and amino acids) generally unbalances metabolism and slows down protocell growth, and when there is competition between catalytic functions cell growth collapses. Autocatalysis of nucleotide synthesis can promote growth but only if nucleotides also catalyse CO
2
fixation; autocatalysis alone leads to the accumulation of nucleotides at the expense of CO
2
fixation and protocell growth rate. Our findings offer a new framework for the emergence of greater metabolic complexity, in which nucleotides catalyse broad-spectrum processes such as CO
2
fixation, hydrogenation and phosphorylation important to the emergence of genetic heredity at the origin of life.
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Affiliation(s)
- Raquel Nunes Palmeira
- Department of Computer Science, Engineering Building, Malet Place, University College London, WC1E 7JG, UK
- Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Marco Colnaghi
- Department of Computer Science, Engineering Building, Malet Place, University College London, WC1E 7JG, UK
- Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Stuart A. Harrison
- Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Andrew Pomiankowski
- Department of Computer Science, Engineering Building, Malet Place, University College London, WC1E 7JG, UK
- Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK
| | - Nick Lane
- Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK
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36
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Harrison SA, Palmeira RN, Halpern A, Lane N. A biophysical basis for the emergence of the genetic code in protocells. BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA. BIOENERGETICS 2022; 1863:148597. [PMID: 35868450 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2022.148597] [Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/12/2022] [Revised: 06/27/2022] [Accepted: 07/13/2022] [Indexed: 11/17/2022]
Abstract
The origin of the genetic code is an abiding mystery in biology. Hints of a 'code within the codons' suggest biophysical interactions, but these patterns have resisted interpretation. Here, we present a new framework, grounded in the autotrophic growth of protocells from CO2 and H2. Recent work suggests that the universal core of metabolism recapitulates a thermodynamically favoured protometabolism right up to nucleotide synthesis. Considering the genetic code in relation to an extended protometabolism allows us to predict most codon assignments. We show that the first letter of the codon corresponds to the distance from CO2 fixation, with amino acids encoded by the purines (G followed by A) being closest to CO2 fixation. These associations suggest a purine-rich early metabolism with a restricted pool of amino acids. The second position of the anticodon corresponds to the hydrophobicity of the amino acid encoded. We combine multiple measures of hydrophobicity to show that this correlation holds strongly for early amino acids but is weaker for later species. Finally, we demonstrate that redundancy at the third position is not randomly distributed around the code: non-redundant amino acids can be assigned based on size, specifically length. We attribute this to additional stereochemical interactions at the anticodon. These rules imply an iterative expansion of the genetic code over time with codon assignments depending on both distance from CO2 and biophysical interactions between nucleotide sequences and amino acids. In this way the earliest RNA polymers could produce non-random peptide sequences with selectable functions in autotrophic protocells.
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Affiliation(s)
- Stuart A Harrison
- Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
| | - Raquel Nunes Palmeira
- Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
| | - Aaron Halpern
- Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
| | - Nick Lane
- Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
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37
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Lerin-Morales KM, Olguín LF, Mateo-Martí E, Colín-García M. Prebiotic Chemistry Experiments Using Microfluidic Devices. Life (Basel) 2022; 12:1665. [PMID: 36295100 PMCID: PMC9605377 DOI: 10.3390/life12101665] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/30/2022] [Revised: 10/15/2022] [Accepted: 10/18/2022] [Indexed: 11/16/2022] Open
Abstract
Microfluidic devices are small tools mostly consisting of one or more channels, with dimensions between one and hundreds of microns, where small volumes of fluids are manipulated. They have extensive use in the biomedical and chemical fields; however, in prebiotic chemistry, they only have been employed recently. In prebiotic chemistry, just three types of microfluidic devices have been used: the first ones are Y-form devices with laminar co-flow, used to study the precipitation of minerals in hydrothermal vents systems; the second ones are microdroplet devices that can form small droplets capable of mimic cellular compartmentalization; and the last ones are devices with microchambers that recreate the microenvironment inside rock pores under hydrothermal conditions. In this review, we summarized the experiments in the field of prebiotic chemistry that employed microfluidic devices. The main idea is to incentivize their use and discuss their potential to perform novel experiments that could contribute to unraveling some prebiotic chemistry questions.
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Affiliation(s)
| | - Luis F. Olguín
- Laboratorio de Biofisicoquímica, Facultad de Química, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad de Mexico 04510, Mexico
| | - Eva Mateo-Martí
- Centro de Astrobiología (CAB), CSIC-INTA, Carretera de Ajalvir Km 4, Torrejón de Ardoz, 28850 Madrid, Spain
| | - María Colín-García
- Instituto de Geología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad de Mexico 04510, Mexico
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38
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Holden DT, Morato NM, Cooks RG. Aqueous microdroplets enable abiotic synthesis and chain extension of unique peptide isomers from free amino acids. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2022; 119:e2212642119. [PMID: 36191178 PMCID: PMC9586328 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2212642119] [Citation(s) in RCA: 61] [Impact Index Per Article: 20.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/22/2022] [Accepted: 08/27/2022] [Indexed: 12/13/2022] Open
Abstract
Amide bond formation, the essential condensation reaction underlying peptide synthesis, is hindered in aqueous systems by the thermodynamic constraints associated with dehydration. This represents a key difficulty for the widely held view that prebiotic chemical evolution leading to the formation of the first biomolecules occurred in an oceanic environment. Recent evidence for the acceleration of chemical reactions at droplet interfaces led us to explore aqueous amino acid droplet chemistry. We report the formation of dipeptide isomer ions from free glycine or L-alanine at the air-water interface of aqueous microdroplets emanating from a single spray source (with or without applied potential) during their flight toward the inlet of a mass spectrometer. The proposed isomeric dipeptide ion is an oxazolidinone that takes fully covalent and ion-neutral complex forms. This structure is consistent with observed fragmentation patterns and its conversion to authentic dipeptide ions upon gentle collisions and for its formation from authentic dipeptides at ultra-low concentrations. It also rationalizes the results of droplet fusion experiments that show that the dipeptide isomer facilitates additional amide bond formation events, yielding authentic tri- through hexapeptides. We propose that the interface of aqueous microdroplets serves as a drying surface that shifts the equilibrium between free amino acids in favor of dehydration via stabilization of the dipeptide isomers. These findings offer a possible solution to the water paradox of biopolymer synthesis in prebiotic chemistry.
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Affiliation(s)
- Dylan T. Holden
- Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907
| | - Nicolás M. Morato
- Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907
| | - R. Graham Cooks
- Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907
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39
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Abstract
α-Amino acids are essential molecular constituents of life, twenty of which are privileged because they are encoded by the ribosomal machinery. The question remains open as to why this number and why this 20 in particular, an almost philosophical question that cannot be conclusively resolved. They are closely related to the evolution of the genetic code and whether nucleic acids, amino acids, and peptides appeared simultaneously and were available under prebiotic conditions when the first self-sufficient complex molecular system emerged on Earth. This report focuses on prebiotic and metabolic aspects of amino acids and proteins starting with meteorites, followed by their formation, including peptides, under plausible prebiotic conditions, and the major biosynthetic pathways in the various kingdoms of life. Coenzymes play a key role in the present analysis in that amino acid metabolism is linked to glycolysis and different variants of the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA, rTCA, and the incomplete horseshoe version) as well as the biosynthesis of the most important coenzymes. Thus, the report opens additional perspectives and facets on the molecular evolution of primary metabolism.
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Affiliation(s)
- Andreas Kirschning
- Institute of Organic ChemistryLeibniz University HannoverSchneiderberg 1B30167HannoverGermany
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40
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Pinna S, Kunz C, Halpern A, Harrison SA, Jordan SF, Ward J, Werner F, Lane N. A prebiotic basis for ATP as the universal energy currency. PLoS Biol 2022; 20:e3001437. [PMID: 36194581 PMCID: PMC9531788 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001437] [Citation(s) in RCA: 36] [Impact Index Per Article: 12.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/20/2021] [Accepted: 08/30/2022] [Indexed: 11/07/2022] Open
Abstract
ATP is universally conserved as the principal energy currency in cells, driving metabolism through phosphorylation and condensation reactions. Such deep conservation suggests that ATP arose at an early stage of biochemical evolution. Yet purine synthesis requires 6 phosphorylation steps linked to ATP hydrolysis. This autocatalytic requirement for ATP to synthesize ATP implies the need for an earlier prebiotic ATP equivalent, which could drive protometabolism before purine synthesis. Why this early phosphorylating agent was replaced, and specifically with ATP rather than other nucleoside triphosphates, remains a mystery. Here, we show that the deep conservation of ATP might reflect its prebiotic chemistry in relation to another universally conserved intermediate, acetyl phosphate (AcP), which bridges between thioester and phosphate metabolism by linking acetyl CoA to the substrate-level phosphorylation of ADP. We confirm earlier results showing that AcP can phosphorylate ADP to ATP at nearly 20% yield in water in the presence of Fe3+ ions. We then show that Fe3+ and AcP are surprisingly favoured. A wide range of prebiotically relevant ions and minerals failed to catalyse ADP phosphorylation. From a panel of prebiotic phosphorylating agents, only AcP, and to a lesser extent carbamoyl phosphate, showed any significant phosphorylating potential. Critically, AcP did not phosphorylate any other nucleoside diphosphate. We use these data, reaction kinetics, and molecular dynamic simulations to infer a possible mechanism. Our findings might suggest that the reason ATP is universally conserved across life is that its formation is chemically favoured in aqueous solution under mild prebiotic conditions.
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Affiliation(s)
- Silvana Pinna
- Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, London, United Kingdom
| | - Cäcilia Kunz
- Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, London, United Kingdom
| | - Aaron Halpern
- Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, London, United Kingdom
| | - Stuart A. Harrison
- Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, London, United Kingdom
| | - Sean F. Jordan
- Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, London, United Kingdom
| | - John Ward
- Department of Biochemical Engineering, University College London, London, United Kingdom
| | - Finn Werner
- Institute for Structural and Molecular Biology, University College London, Darwin Building, London, United Kingdom
| | - Nick Lane
- Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE), Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, London, United Kingdom
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41
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Borrego-Sánchez A, Gutiérrez-Ariza C, Sainz-Díaz CI, Cartwright JHE. The Effect of the Presence of Amino Acids on the Precipitation of Inorganic Chemical-Garden Membranes: Biomineralization at the Origin of Life. LANGMUIR : THE ACS JOURNAL OF SURFACES AND COLLOIDS 2022; 38:10538-10547. [PMID: 35974697 PMCID: PMC9434990 DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.2c01345] [Citation(s) in RCA: 3] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 05/25/2022] [Revised: 08/03/2022] [Indexed: 06/07/2023]
Abstract
If life developed in hydrothermal vents, it would have been within mineral membranes. The first proto-cells must have evolved to manipulate the mineral membranes that formed their compartments in order to control their metabolism. There must have occurred a biological takeover of the self-assembled mineral structures of the vents, with the incorporation of proto-biological molecules within the mineral membranes to alter their properties for life's purposes. Here, we study a laboratory analogue of this process: chemical-garden precipitation of the amino acids arginine and tryptophan with the metal salt iron chloride and sodium silicate. We produced these chemical gardens using different methodologies in order to determine the dependence of the morphology and chemistry on the growth conditions, as well as the effect of the amino acids on the formation of the iron-silicate chemical garden. We compared the effects of having amino acids initially within the forming chemical garden, corresponding to the internal zones of hydrothermal vents, or else outside, corresponding to the surrounding ocean. The characterization of the formed chemical gardens using X-ray diffraction, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, elemental analysis, and scanning electron microscopy demonstrates the presence of amino acids in these structures. The growth method in which the amino acid is initially in the tablet with the iron salt is that which generated chemical gardens with more amino acids in their structures.
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Affiliation(s)
- Ana Borrego-Sánchez
- Instituto
Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra (CSIC-University of Granada), Armilla, 18100 Granada Spain
- Department
of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Technology, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Granada, Campus de Cartuja s/n, 18071 Granada, Spain
| | - Carlos Gutiérrez-Ariza
- Instituto
Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra (CSIC-University of Granada), Armilla, 18100 Granada Spain
| | - C. Ignacio Sainz-Díaz
- Instituto
Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra (CSIC-University of Granada), Armilla, 18100 Granada Spain
| | - Julyan H. E. Cartwright
- Instituto
Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra (CSIC-University of Granada), Armilla, 18100 Granada Spain
- Instituto
Carlos I de Física Teórica y Computacional, Universidad de Granada, 18071 Granada, Spain
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42
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Li Y, Kitadai N, Sekine Y, Kurokawa H, Nakano Y, Johnson-Finn K. Geoelectrochemistry-driven alteration of amino acids to derivative organics in carbonaceous chondrite parent bodies. Nat Commun 2022; 13:4893. [PMID: 35986003 PMCID: PMC9391434 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-32596-3] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/15/2021] [Accepted: 08/08/2022] [Indexed: 11/16/2022] Open
Abstract
A long-standing question regarding carbonaceous chondrites (CCs) is how the CCs' organics were sourced and converted before and after the accretion of their parent bodies. Growing evidence shows that amino acid abundances in CCs decrease with an elongated aqueous alteration. However, the underlying chemical processes are unclear. If CCs' parent bodies were water-rock differentiated, pH and redox gradients can drive electrochemical reactions by using H2 as an electron source. Here, we simulate such redox conditions and demonstrate that α-amino acids are electrochemically altered to monoamines and α-hydroxy acids on FeS and NiS catalysts at 25 °C. This conversion is consistent with their enrichment compared to amino acid analogs in heavily altered CCs. Our results thus suggest that H2 can be an important driver for organic evolution in water-rock differentiated CC parent bodies as well as the Solar System icy bodies that might possess similar pH and redox gradients.
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Affiliation(s)
- Yamei Li
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, Japan.
| | - Norio Kitadai
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, Japan
- Super-cutting-edge Grand and Advanced Research (SUGAR) Program, Institute for Extra-cutting-edge Science and Technology Avant-garde Research (X-star), Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), Yokosuka, Japan
| | - Yasuhito Sekine
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, Japan
- Institute of Nature and Environmental Technology, Kanazawa University, Kanazawa, Japan
| | - Hiroyuki Kurokawa
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, Japan
| | - Yuko Nakano
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, Japan
| | - Kristin Johnson-Finn
- Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-IE-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, Japan
- Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, USA
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43
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Xu J, Cotruvo JA. Reconsidering the czcD (NiCo) Riboswitch as an Iron Riboswitch. ACS BIO & MED CHEM AU 2022; 2:376-385. [PMID: 35996475 PMCID: PMC9389577 DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomedchemau.1c00069] [Citation(s) in RCA: 5] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/14/2023]
Abstract
![]()
Recent work has proposed
a new mechanism of bacterial iron regulation:
riboswitches that undergo a conformational change in response to FeII. The czcD (NiCo) riboswitch was initially
proposed to be specific for NiII and CoII, but
we recently showed via a czcD-based fluorescent sensor
that FeII is also a plausible physiological ligand for
this riboswitch class. Here, we provide direct evidence that this
riboswitch class responds to FeII. Isothermal titration
calorimetry studies of the native czcD riboswitches
from three organisms show no response to MnII, a weak response
to ZnII, and similar dissociation constants (∼1
μM) and conformational responses for FeII, CoII, and NiII. Only the iron response is in the physiological
concentration regime; the riboswitches’ responses to CoII, NiII, and ZnII require 103-, 105-, and 106-fold higher “free”
metal ion concentrations, respectively, than the typical availability
of those metal ions in cells. By contrast, the “Sensei”
RNA, recently claimed to be an iron-specific riboswitch, exhibits
no response to FeII. Our results demonstrate that iron
responsiveness is a conserved property of czcD riboswitches
and clarify that this is the only family of iron-responsive riboswitch
identified to date, setting the stage for characterization of their
physiological function.
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Affiliation(s)
- Jiansong Xu
- Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United States
- Center for RNA Molecular Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United States
| | - Joseph A. Cotruvo
- Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United States
- Center for RNA Molecular Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United States
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44
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Prebiotic synthesis of α-amino acids and orotate from α-ketoacids potentiates transition to extant metabolic pathways. Nat Chem 2022; 14:1142-1150. [PMID: 35902742 DOI: 10.1038/s41557-022-00999-w] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/23/2021] [Accepted: 06/14/2022] [Indexed: 11/08/2022]
Abstract
The Strecker reaction of aldehydes is the pre-eminent pathway to explain the prebiotic origins of α-amino acids. However, biology employs transamination of α-ketoacids to synthesize amino acids which are then transformed to nucleobases, implying an evolutionary switch-abiotically or biotically-of a prebiotic pathway involving the Strecker reaction into today's biosynthetic pathways. Here we show that α-ketoacids react with cyanide and ammonia sources to form the corresponding α-amino acids through the Bucherer-Bergs pathway. An efficient prebiotic transformation of oxaloacetate to aspartate via N-carbamoyl aspartate enables the simultaneous formation of dihydroorotate, paralleling the biochemical synthesis of orotate as the precursor to pyrimidine nucleobases. Glyoxylate forms both glycine and orotate and reacts with malonate and urea to form aspartate and dihydroorotate. These results, along with the previously demonstrated protometabolic analogues of the Krebs cycle, suggest that there can be a natural emergence of congruent forerunners of biological pathways with the potential for seamless transition from prebiotic chemistry to modern metabolism.
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Müller UF, Elsila J, Trail D, DasGupta S, Giese CC, Walton CR, Cohen ZR, Stolar T, Krishnamurthy R, Lyons TW, Rogers KL, Williams LD. Frontiers in Prebiotic Chemistry and Early Earth Environments. ORIGINS LIFE EVOL B 2022; 52:165-181. [PMID: 35796897 PMCID: PMC9261198 DOI: 10.1007/s11084-022-09622-x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 02/04/2022] [Accepted: 04/29/2022] [Indexed: 11/28/2022]
Abstract
The Prebiotic Chemistry and Early Earth Environments (PCE3) Consortium is a community of researchers seeking to understand the origins of life on Earth and in the universe. PCE3 is one of five Research Coordination Networks (RCNs) within NASA’s Astrobiology Program. Here we report on the inaugural PCE3 workshop, intended to cross-pollinate, transfer information, promote cooperation, break down disciplinary barriers, identify new directions, and foster collaborations. This workshop, entitled, “Building a New Foundation”, was designed to propagate current knowledge, identify possibilities for multidisciplinary collaboration, and ultimately define paths for future collaborations. Presentations addressed the likely conditions on early Earth in ways that could be incorporated into prebiotic chemistry experiments and conceptual models to improve their plausibility and accuracy. Additionally, the discussions that followed among workshop participants helped to identify within each subdiscipline particularly impactful new research directions. At its core, the foundational knowledge base presented in this workshop should underpin future workshops and enable collaborations that bridge the many disciplines that are part of PCE3.
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Affiliation(s)
| | - Jamie Elsila
- NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, United States
| | - Dustin Trail
- University of Rochester, Rochester, United States
| | | | - Claudia-Corina Giese
- Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.,Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands
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Yi J, Kaur H, Kazöne W, Rauscher SA, Gravillier L, Muchowska KB, Moran J. A Nonenzymatic Analog of Pyrimidine Nucleobase Biosynthesis. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 2022; 61:e202117211. [PMID: 35304939 PMCID: PMC9325535 DOI: 10.1002/anie.202117211] [Citation(s) in RCA: 21] [Impact Index Per Article: 7.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/16/2021] [Indexed: 11/28/2022]
Abstract
Metabolic theories for the origin of life posit that inorganic catalysts enabled self-organized chemical precursors to the pathways of metabolism, including those that make genetic molecules. Recently, experiments showing nonenzymatic versions of a number of core metabolic pathways have started to support this idea. However, experimental demonstrations of nonenzymatic reaction sequences along the de novo ribonucleotide biosynthesis pathways are limited. Here we show that all three reactions of pyrimidine nucleobase biosynthesis that convert aspartate to orotate proceed at 60 °C without photochemistry under aqueous conditions in the presence of metals such as Cu2+ and Mn4+ . Combining reactions into one-pot variants is also possible. Life may not have invented pyrimidine nucleobase biosynthesis from scratch, but simply refined existing nonenzymatic reaction channels. This work is a first step towards uniting metabolic theories of life's origin with those centered around genetic molecules.
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Affiliation(s)
- Jing Yi
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS)CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
| | - Harpreet Kaur
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS)CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
| | - Wahnyalo Kazöne
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS)CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
| | - Sophia A. Rauscher
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS)CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
| | - Louis‐Albin Gravillier
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS)CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
| | - Kamila B. Muchowska
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS)CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
| | - Joseph Moran
- Institut de Science et d'Ingénierie Supramoléculaires (ISIS)CNRS UMR 7006Université de Strasbourg8 Allée Gaspard Monge67000StrasbourgFrance
- Institut Universitaire de France (IUF)France
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Evolution of Realistic Organic Mixtures for the Origins of Life through Wet–Dry Cycling. SCI 2022. [DOI: 10.3390/sci4020022] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022] Open
Abstract
One of the challenges in understanding chemical evolution is the large number of starting organics and environments that were plausible on early Earth. Starting with realistic organic mixtures and using chemical analyses that are not biologically biased, understanding the interplay between organic composition and environment can be approached using statistical analysis. In this work, a mixture of 73 organics was cycled through dehydrating conditions five times, considering environmental parameters of pH, salinity, and rehydration solution. Products were analyzed by HPLC, amide and ester assays, and phosphatase and esterase assays. While all environmental factors were found to influence chemical evolution, salinity was found to play a large role in the evolution of these mixtures, with samples diverging at very high sea salt concentrations. This framework should be expanded and formalized to improve our understanding of abiogenesis.
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Barge LM, Rodriguez LE, Weber JM, Theiling BP. Determining the "Biosignature Threshold" for Life Detection on Biotic, Abiotic, or Prebiotic Worlds. ASTROBIOLOGY 2022; 22:481-493. [PMID: 34898272 DOI: 10.1089/ast.2021.0079] [Citation(s) in RCA: 17] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 06/14/2023]
Abstract
The field of prebiotic chemistry has demonstrated that complex organic chemical systems that exhibit various life-like properties can be produced abiotically in the laboratory. Understanding these chemical systems is important for astrobiology and life detection since we do not know the extent to which prebiotic chemistry might exist or have existed on other worlds. Nor do we know what signatures are diagnostic of an extant or "failed" prebiotic system. On Earth, biology has suppressed most abiotic organic chemistry and overprints geologic records of prebiotic chemistry; therefore, it is difficult to validate whether chemical signatures from future planetary missions are remnant or extant prebiotic systems. The "biosignature threshold" between whether a chemical signature is more likely to be produced by abiotic versus biotic chemistry on a given world could vary significantly, depending on the particular environment, and could change over time, especially if life were to emerge and diversify on that world. To interpret organic signatures detected during a planetary mission, we advocate for (1) gaining a more complete understanding of prebiotic/abiotic chemical possibilities in diverse planetary environments and (2) involving experimental prebiotic samples as analogues when generating comparison libraries for "life-detection" mission instruments.
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Affiliation(s)
- Laura M Barge
- NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA
| | - Laura E Rodriguez
- NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA
| | - Jessica M Weber
- NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA
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Yi J, Kaur H, Kazöne W, Rauscher SA, Gravillier LA, Muchowska KB, Moran J. A Nonenzymatic Analog of Pyrimidine Nucleobase Biosynthesis. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 2022. [DOI: 10.1002/ange.202117211] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/07/2022]
Affiliation(s)
- Jing Yi
- University of Strasbourg: Universite de Strasbourg ISIS FRANCE
| | - Harpreet Kaur
- University of Strasbourg: Universite de Strasbourg ISIS FRANCE
| | - Wahnyalo Kazöne
- Université de Strasbourg: Universite de Strasbourg ISIS FRANCE
| | | | | | | | - Joseph Moran
- University of Strasbourg ISIS 8 allée Gaspard MongeBP 70028 67083 Strasbourg FRANCE
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50
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Nitschke W, Schoepp‐Cothenet B, Duval S, Zuchan K, Farr O, Baymann F, Panico F, Minguzzi A, Branscomb E, Russell MJ. Aqueous electrochemistry: The toolbox for life's emergence from redox disequilibria. ELECTROCHEMICAL SCIENCE ADVANCES 2022. [DOI: 10.1002/elsa.202100192] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/09/2022] Open
Affiliation(s)
| | | | - Simon Duval
- CNRS, BIP (UMR 7281), Aix Marseille Univ Marseille France
| | - Kilian Zuchan
- CNRS, BIP (UMR 7281), Aix Marseille Univ Marseille France
| | - Orion Farr
- CNRS, BIP (UMR 7281), Aix Marseille Univ Marseille France
- Aix Marseille Univ CINaM (UMR 7325) Luminy France
| | - Frauke Baymann
- CNRS, BIP (UMR 7281), Aix Marseille Univ Marseille France
| | - Francesco Panico
- Dipartimento di Chimica Università degli Studi di Milano Milan Italy
| | | | - Elbert Branscomb
- Department of Physics Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois Urbana Illinois USA
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