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The Origin and Early History of Life

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Title: The Origin and Early History of Life


1
The Origin and Early History of Life
  • Chapter 4

2
Outline
  • Origin of Life Hypotheses
  • Chemical Evolution
  • Cell Origin Theories
  • Bubble Theories
  • Prokaryotic Cells
  • Archaebacteria
  • Bacteria
  • Eukaryotic Cells
  • Extraterrestrial Life

3
What do we know?
  • 1.5 Million species identified so far
  • Many more remain unidentified

4
Are we alone?
  1. Yes
  2. No

5
Which one represents possible origin of life on
earth?
  1. Extraterrestrial aliens brought it
  2. Came with meteors from other planets
  3. Some superhuman powers created it
  4. Chemicals from primordial soup combined to make
    life
  5. None of the above

6
What have we learned so far?
  • Cell theory
  • All living organisms are made of cells, and all
    living cells come from other living cells.
  • Molecular basis of inheritance
  • DNA encodes genes which make-up and control
    living organisms.
  • Evolutionary change
  • Life-forms have evolved varying characteristics
    to adapt to varied environments.
  • Evolutionary conservation
  • Some characteristics of earlier organisms are
    preserved and passed on to future generations.

7
Where the first cell came from?
  • Or.Can life arise from non-life?
  • Can we test this scientifically?
  • Conditions on early earth
  • Formation of organic molecules
  • Chemical evolution
  • Primitive cell
  • Prokaryotes
  • Eukaryotes
  • Multicellular organisms

8
Conditions on Early Earth-Reducing Atmosphere
  • Life most likely emerged under high-temperature
    conditions.
  • Early atmosphere is often referred to as a
    reducing atmosphere.
  • exact conditions unknown
  • ample availability of hydrogen atoms
  • very little oxygen

9
Origin of Life - Location
  • Oceans edge
  • bubble hypotheses
  • Under frozen seas
  • problematic due to necessary conditions
  • Deep in Earths crust
  • byproduct of volcanic activity
  • Within clay
  • positively-charged clay
  • Deep-sea vents
  • conditions suitable for Archaea

10
Miller-Urey Experiment
  • Attempted to reproduce early reducing atmosphere
    and produce organic compounds from inorganic
    materials
  • hydrogen-rich
  • electrical discharges
  • Produced
  • amino acids
  • carbohydrates
  • lipids
  • nucleotides

11
Chemical Evolution
  • If life originally arose from non-life, how might
    this have happened?
  • Consider the following scenario
  • Synthesis and accumulation of small organic
    molecules
  • Joining of these monomers into polymers
  • Aggregation of these molecules into droplets to
    form localized microenvironments
  • Origin of heredity

12
Polymer Formation
  • Sidney Fox (University of Miami) demonstrated the
    abiotic polymerization of organic monomers
  • Polymers were formed when dilute solutions of
    organic molecules were dripped onto hot sand,
    clay, or rock
  • Proteinoids
  • Clay can serve to concentrate these molecules
  • Monomers bind to charged sites on clay particles
  • Metal ions in clay have catalytic function

13
Which came first?
  • DNA
  • RNA
  • Protein

Most Likely
14
Abiotic RNA Replication
Remember RNA enzymes?
15
Lets make something with those molecules
  • Aggregations of abiotically produced molecules
  • Preceded living cells
  • Laboratory experiments have demonstrated their
    formation from organic compounds
  • Protobionts and liposomes

16
Origin of protobiots
  • Bubble theories (Oparin)

17
PROTO-CELLS
  • Chemical evolution ultimately led to the
    formation of proto-cells
  • Membrane-surrounded sacs containing genetic
    material and metabolically-active molecules
  • Such structures have been experimentally produced
  • From these proto-cells, cells ultimately arose

18
Earliest Cells
  • Microfossils have been found in rocks as old as
    3.5 billion years old.
  • resemble prokaryotes

Stromatolites
19
EARLIEST LIFE
  • The earliest cells were prokaryotic
  • Lack a membrane-bound nucleus
  • Early in the history of life, populations
    diverged into two major lineages
  • ? bacteria
  • ? archaea eukaryotes

20
Archaebacteria
  • Extreme-condition prokaryotes
  • lack peptidoglycan in cell walls
  • methanogens
  • extreme halophiles
  • extreme thermophiles
  • thought to have split from Bacteria 2 bya.

21
Bacteria
  • Second major group of prokaryotes
  • strong cell walls
  • simpler gene structure
  • contains most modern prokaryotes
  • includes photosynthetic bacteria
  • cyanobacteria

22
EARLIEST LIFE
  • How do we know that domain Eukarya is more
    closely related to domain Archaea than to domain
    Bacteria?
  • Analysis of rRNAs and other highly conserved
    genes and proteins provide the strongest
    evidence

23
First Eukaryotic Cells
  • Eukaryotes probably arose about 1.5 bya.
  • Internal membrane-bound structures such as
    mitochondria and chloroplasts are thought to have
    evolved via endosymbiosis.
  • Energy-producing bacteria were engulfed by larger
    bacteria.
  • beneficial symbiotic relationship

24
First Eukaryotic Cells
  • Sexual reproduction
  • Eukaryotic cells can reproduce sexually, thus
    allowing for genetic recombination.
  • Genetic variation is the raw material necessary
    for evolution.
  • Multicellularity
  • arisen many times among eukaryotes
  • fosters specialization

25
Development of new branches on the TREE
26
TAXONOMY
27
Extraterrestrial Life
  • Universe has 1020 stars similar to our sun.
  • Conditions may be such that life has evolved on
    other worlds in addition to our own.
  • ancient bacteria on Mars.
  • largest moon of Jupiter, Europa, covered with
    ice.
  • liquid water may be underneath

28
The Domains and Kingdoms
29
What they have and what they dont
30
What about this group?
31
Summary
  • Fundamental Properties of Life
  • Origin of Life Hypotheses
  • Chemical Evolution
  • Cell Origin Theories
  • Bubble Theories
  • Prokaryotic Cells
  • Archaebacteria
  • Bacteria
  • Eukaryotic Cells
  • Extraterrestrial Life

32
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