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Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev., 06 1997, 239-261, Vol 61, No. 2
DW Deamer
The first systems of molecules having the properties of the living state
presumably self-assembled from a mixture of organic compounds available on
the prebiotic Earth. To carry out the polymer synthesis characteristic of
all forms of life, such systems would require one or more sources of energy
to activate monomers to be incorporated into polymers. Possible sources of
energy for this process include heat, light energy, chemical energy, and
ionic potentials across membranes. These energy sources are explored here,
with a particular focus on mechanisms by which self-assembled molecular
aggregates could capture the energy and use it to form chemical bonds in
polymers. Based on available evidence, a reasonable conjecture is that
membranous vesicles were present on the prebiotic Earth and that systems of
replicating and catalytic macromolecules could become encapsulated in the
vesicles. In the laboratory, this can be modeled by encapsulated
polymerases prepared as liposomes. By an appropriate choice of lipids, the
permeability properties of the liposomes can be adjusted so that ionic
substrates permeate at a sufficient rate to provide a source of monomers
for the enzymes, with the result that nucleic acids accumulate in the
vesicles. Despite this progress, there is still no clear mechanism by which
the free energy of light, ion gradients, or redox potential can be coupled
to polymer bond formation in a protocellular structure.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
The first living systems: a bioenergetic perspective
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, Santa Cruz 95064, USA. deamer@hydrogen.ucsc.edu
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