Origin of Life to Cell Diversity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

Origin of Life to Cell Diversity

Description:

Or - 'if it has the properties of multiplication, variation, and heredity. ... A living thing have heredity = tends to get rise to its like with occasional ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:948
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: mdChu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Origin of Life to Cell Diversity


1
Origin of Life to Cell Diversity
  • Dr.Jessada Denduangboripant
  • Department of Biology
  • Faculty of Science
  • Chulalongkorn University

2
Origin of Life to Cell Diversity
  • 1. Life and Genetic Information
  • 2. From Chemistry to Heredity
  • 3. From Heredity to Simple Cells
  • 4. The Origin of Eukaryotic Cells

3
1. Life and Genetic Information
  • What is Life and the Nature of Life?
  • The Major Transitions
  • How did genetic information increase?

4
What is Life the Nature of Life?
  • There are 2 ways to define life.
  • First - Something is alive if it has certain
    properties that we associate with living thing on
    Earth.
  • E.g. if it has a complex structure, and grows or
    responds to stimuli.
  • Or it has a metabolism (its atoms are not
    permanent parts, but taken in from the
    environment, combined to form chemical compounds,
    and excreted back to the environment).

5
What is Life the Nature of Life?
  • Or - if it has the properties of multiplication,
    variation, and heredity.
  • A living thing multiplies can produce 2 or
    more similar entities.
  • A living thing varies are not identical.
  • A living thing have heredity tends to get rise
    to its like with occasional breakdown for
    variation.
  • These properties are needed if the population is
    to evolve by natural selection.

6
Can you distinguish between a living thing and an
artifact by that definition?
7
The Major Transitions
  • Q How the first life with multiplication,
    variation, and heredity could arise in the
    chemical environment of the primitive Earth?
  • Evolution can lead simple life to have greater
    complexity by a number of major changes in the
    way in which genetic information is stored,
    transmitted translated - Major Transitions.

8
Major Transitions
  • Replicating molecules --gt Populations of
    molecules in protocells.
  • Independent replicators --gt Chromosomes.
  • RNA (as gene enzyme) --gt DNA protein.
  • Prokaryote --gt Eukaryote.
  • And so on . till human societies.

9
How did Genetic Information Increase?
  • Duplication divergence the duplication of a
    piece of DNA, from a single gene to a whole set
    of chromosomes, followed by minor divergence.
  • Symbiosis 2 different kinds of individuals come
    to live together (mutualisitic symbiosis). The
    new individual has the sum of the information
    present in the 2 symbionts.

10
2. From Chemistry to Heredity
  • The Primitive Soup ( Pizza)
  • The Origin of Replication
  • RNA Worlds

11
The Primitive Soup
  • Miller (1953) passed an electric discharge
    through a chamber with water, methane (CH4),
    ammonia (NH3)
  • --gt Various amino acids, sugars, purines
    pyrimidines were made.

12
Primitive Soup
  • But, the yield of ribose sugar (backbone of RNA
    DNA) was low.
  • And the amino acids were linked together not only
    by peptide bonds.
  • How polymers (proteins, nucleic acids) linked by
    specific chemical bonds, could have been formed?

13
Primitive Pizza (Günter Wächtershäuser, late
1980s)
  • Polymerization of those organic compounds took
    place while their (ve) charged ions (e.g.
    phosphate ions, PO43-) bonded to a (ve) charged
    surface of iron pyrite.
  • Binding to a surface ensure that molecules were
    held in a correct orientation --gt be able to link
    together.
  • Also increase local concentration of the
    interacting molecules --gt speed up the reaction.

14
The Primitive Pizza
15
The Origin of Replication
  • Experimentally, a piece of 6 bp DNA can be
    replicated from a starting unit (two
    single-stranded molecules, each consisting of 3
    bases linked end to end) without enzymes.
  • Moreover, if incubating a short primer RNA with 4
    RNA nucleotides and a replicase enzyme, the
    primer molecule will be replicated. ---gt RNAs
    1st role as a template.

16
RNA Worlds
  • The origin of life must have had RNA molecules to
    act not only as genetic-information carrying
    templates but also as enzymes.
  • Problems of DNA-protien
  • No enzymes can exist without long DNA molecules
    to code for them.
  • But, no long DNA could be reliably copied without
    enzymes.

17
RNA Worlds
  • But, single-stranded RNA can fold to form a 2nd
    structures (e.g. hairpin loops) leading to a 3-D
    3rd structures (same as amino acid sequences) and
    could act as enzymes - Ribozymes.
  • Moreover, primitive ribozymes acquired specific
    amino acids as cofactors to catalyze more
    efficiently --gt Code.

18
RNA Worlds
19
3. From Heredity to Simple Cells
  • Why Cells?
  • The Origin of Membranes and Cells

20
Why Cells?
  • To progress from simple replicating molecules to
    more complex, a web of co-operative interactions
    between genes had to evolve.
  • One way to do that is to let all replicating
    molecules be enclosed within compartments or
    cells.

21
Why Cells?
  • The early cells must require
  • a membrane (permit nutrients to pass through, but
    impermeable to metabolic molecules)
  • building blocks for new membrane and new genetic
    materials
  • and a collection of RNA-like genes acting as
    catalysts of various cellular processes.

22
Origin of Membranes
  • To form primitive membranes, fatty acids may have
    formed as a lipid-bilayer flat sheet on charges
    surfaces of minerals.
  • Complex proteins (e.g. permease) could have been
    inserted into the membrane to increase its
    permeability for desirable compounds.

23
Origin of Cells
  • The first true cells with membranes were formed
    as semicells (minute semispherical vesicles) on
    surfaces.
  • Semicells completely folded into a sphere to
    avoid the hydrophobic site of fatty acids to
    contact with water.

24
4. The Origin of Eukaryotic Cells
  • The Endomembrane System
  • From Symbrionts to Organelles

25
(No Transcript)
26
Origin of Eukaryotic Cells
  • The transition from prokaryote to eukaryote is a
    complicated series of events
  • 1. Loss of the rigid cell wall.
  • 2. Acquisition of phagocytosis to feed on solid
    particles.
  • 3. Origin of an internal cytoskeleton (actin
    filament microtubules) cell locomotion.
  • 4. Appearance of an internal cell membranes,
    including the nuclear membranes.

27
Origin of Eukaryotic Cells
  • 5. Spatial separation of transcription and
    translation.
  • 6. Evolution of rod-shaped chromosomes with
    multiple origins of replication --gt less
    limitation on genome size.
  • 7. Finally, the origin of cell organelles, esp.
    mitochondria and plastids (in algae and plants).

28
The Endomembrane System
  • Nuclear membrane of eukaryotes consists of 2
    adpressed membrane, formed by flattening of
    spherical vesicles, to surround the nucleus.
  • The same system as ER (endoplasmic reticulum) and
    other cell vesicles, e.g. food vesicles and
    lysosomes.
  • It divides transcription process inside nucleus
    from translation in cytoplasm, but has nuclear
    pores for mRNA to pass out for replication
    transcription enzymes to pass into.

29
From Symbrionts to Organelles
  • Nowaday, mitochondrias and chloroplasts are
    believed to be descended from symbiotic purple
    bacteria and cyanobacteria.
  • These eukaryotic organelles have two membranes
    and multiply within the cell by binary fission.
  • Also have their own small circular chromosomes
    and small ribosomes, similar to those of
    bacteria, suggesting that they may be the
    descendants of formerly free-living bacteria with
    similar metabolic capacities.

30
Finally, the last sentence of Charles Darwins
Origin of Species
  • There is a grandeur in this view of life,
  • with its several powers, being originally
    breathed into a few forms or into one
  • and that,
  • while this planet has gone cycling on according
    to the fixed law of gravity,
  • from so simple a beginning endless forms most
    beautiful and most wonderful have been,
  • and are being evolved
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com