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Bioenergetics and Life's Origins
Authors:David Deamer and  Arthur L Weber
Institution:1Department of Biomolecular Engineering, Baskin School of Engineering, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95064;2SETI Institute, NASA Ames Research Center, Mountain View, California 94043
Abstract:Bioenergetics is central to our understanding of living systems, yet has attracted relatively little attention in origins of life research. This article focuses on energy resources available to drive primitive metabolism and the synthesis of polymers that could be incorporated into molecular systems having properties associated with the living state. The compartmented systems are referred to as protocells, each different from all the rest and representing a kind of natural experiment. The origin of life was marked when a rare few protocells happened to have the ability to capture energy from the environment to initiate catalyzed heterotrophic growth directed by heritable genetic information in the polymers. This article examines potential sources of energy available to protocells, and mechanisms by which the energy could be used to drive polymer synthesis.Previous research on life''s origins has for the most part focused on the chemistry and energy sources required to produce the small molecules of life—amino acids, nucleobases, and amphiphiles—and to a lesser extent on condensation reactions by which the monomers can be linked into biologically relevant polymers. In modern living cells, polymers are synthesized from activated monomers such as the nucleoside triphosphates used by DNA and RNA polymerases, and the tRNA-amino acyl conjugates that supply ribosomes with activated amino acids. Activated monomers are essential because polymerization reactions occur in an aqueous medium and are therefore energetically uphill in the absence of activation.A central problem therefore concerns mechanisms by which prebiotic monomers could have been activated to assemble into polymers. Most biopolymers of life are synthesized when the equivalent of a water molecule is removed to form the ester bonds of nucleic acids, glycoside bonds of polysaccharides, and peptide bonds in proteins. In life today, the removal of water is performed upstream of the actual bond formation. This process involves the energetically downhill transfer of electrons, which is coupled to either substrate-level oxidation or generation of a proton gradient that in turn is the energy source for the synthesis of anhydride pyrophosphate bonds in ATP. The energy stored in the pyrophosphate bond is then distributed throughout the cell to drive most other energy‐dependent reactions. This is a complex and highly evolved process, so here we consider simpler ways in which energy could have been captured from the environment and made available for primitive versions of metabolism and polymer synthesis. Because the atmosphere of the primitive Earth did not contain appreciable oxygen, this review of primitive bioenergetics is limited to anaerobic sources of energy.
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