The crash of meteors on early Earth likely
generated hydrogen cyanide,
which could have kick-started the production of biomolecules needed to make the
first cells.
The origin
of life on Earth is a set of paradoxes. In order for life to have gotten
started, there must have been a genetic molecule—something like DNA or RNA—capable of passing
along blueprints for making proteins, the workhorse molecules of life. But
modern cells can’t copy DNA and RNA without the help of proteins themselves. To
make matters more vexing, none of these molecules can do their jobs without
fatty lipids, which provide the membranes that cells need to hold their
contents inside. And in yet another chicken-and-egg complication, protein-based
enzymes (encoded by genetic molecules) are needed to synthesize lipids.
Now, researchers
say they may have solved these paradoxes. Chemists report today that a pair of
simple compounds, which would have been abundant on early Earth, can give rise
to a network of simple reactions that produce the three major classes of biomolecules—nucleic
acids, amino acids, and lipids—needed for the earliest form of life to get its
start. Although the new work does not prove that this is how life started, it
may eventually help explain one of the deepest mysteries in modern science.
“This is a very
important paper,” says Jack Szostak, a molecular biologist and origin-of-life
researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who was not affiliated
with the current research. “It proposes for the first time a scenario by which
almost all of the essential building blocks for life could be assembled in one
geological setting.”
Scientists have
long touted their own favorite scenarios for which set of biomolecules formed
first. “RNA World” proponents, for example suggest RNA may have been the pioneer;
not only is it able to carry genetic information, but it can also serve as a
proteinlike chemical catalyst, speeding up certain reactions. Metabolism-first
proponents, meanwhile, have argued that simple metal catalysts, as opposed to
advanced protein-based enzymes, may have created a soup of organic building
blocks that could have given rise to the other biomolecules.
The RNA World
hypothesis got a big boost in 2009. Chemists led by John Sutherland at the
University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom reported that they had discovered
that relatively simple precursor compounds called acetylene and formaldehyde
could undergo a sequence of reactions to produce two of RNA’s four nucleotide
building blocks, showing a plausible route to how RNA could have formed on its
own—without the need for enzymes—in the primordial soup. Critics, though,
pointed out that acetylene and formaldehyde are still somewhat complex
molecules themselves. That begged the question of where they came from.
For their
current study, Sutherland and his colleagues set out to work backward from
those chemicals to see if they could find a route to RNA from even simpler
starting materials. They succeeded. In the current issue of Nature Chemistry,
Sutherland’s team reports that it created nucleic acid precursors starting with
just hydrogen cyanide (HCN), hydrogen sulfide (H2S), and ultraviolet (UV)
light. What is more, Sutherland says, the conditions that produce nucleic acid
precursors also create the starting materials needed to make natural amino
acids and lipids. That suggests a single set of reactions could have given rise
to most of life’s building blocks simultaneously.
Sutherland’s
team argues that early Earth was a favorable setting for those reactions. HCN
is abundant in comets, which rained down steadily for nearly the first several
hundred million years of Earth’s history. The impacts would also have produced
enough energy to synthesize HCN from hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen. Likewise,
Sutherland says, H2S was thought to have been common on early Earth, as was the
UV radiation that could drive the reactions and metal-containing minerals that
could have catalyzed them.
That said,
Sutherland cautions that the reactions that would have made each of the sets of
building blocks are different enough from one another—requiring different metal
catalysts, for example—that they likely would not have all occurred in the same
location. Rather, he says, slight variations in chemistry and energy could have
favored the creation of one set of building blocks over another, such as amino
acids or lipids, in different places. “Rainwater would then wash these
compounds into a common pool,” says Dave Deamer, an origin-of-life researcher
at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who wasn’t affiliated with the
research.
Could life have
kindled in that common pool? That detail is almost certainly forever lost to
history. But the idea and the “plausible chemistry” behind it is worth careful
thought, Deamer says. Szostak agrees. “This general scenario raises many
questions,” he says, “and I am sure that it will be debated for some time to
come.”
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