Pages

Monday, December 17, 2012

The Transition from Abiotic Chemistry to Cellular Life

Slowly step by step science is finding out how life got started. This paper about the metabolism of early organisms caught my eye, especially that bit.
The earliest form of carbon fixation identified by scientists achieved a special kind of built-in robustness -- not seen in modern cells -- by layering multiple carbon-fixing mechanisms. This redundancy allowed early life to compensate for a lack of refined control over its internal chemistry, and formed a template for the later splits that created the earliest major branches in the tree of life.
So I take it, basically these early organisms had two metabolic pathways – let's call them "1" and "2". Pathway 1 took precursor molecule A and converted it (with the help of energy) into something useful for the organism – and pathway 2 did that the same with precursor molecule B. Now, as the "refined control" was missing in that early stage of life, the organism had to take what was available. Precursor molecule A is available? Use pathway 1! Precursor molecule B is available? Use pathway 2!

No comments:

Post a Comment

Comments are most welcome! But please:

- No SPAM whatsoever, no supplements, no pharmaceuticals, no herbs or any other advertisements

- Absolutely no quack-doctors pushing their quack-BS websites (and if you are a quack, I will call you out)

- Be critical if you want to, but try to be coherent

Comments are moderated, because I am tired of Gerwyn-V99-The-Idiot and his moronic sockpuppets, and tired of the story of the two dogs, but I will try to publish everything else.

If you are not Gerwyn (and want to tell me something other than the story of the two dogs), then relax and write something! :-)