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Title Chapter 18 Origin and History of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Origin of Life The Early Earth • The early atmosphere most likely consisted mainly of these inorganic chemicals: – – – – water vapor, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, small amounts of hydrogen, methane, ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, and carbon monoxide. • The early atmosphere contained little free oxygen (O2) and was probably a reducing atmosphere with little free oxygen; a reducing atmosphere lacks free O2 and allows formation of complex organic molecules. • The early Earth was so hot that H2O only existed as a vapor in dense, thick clouds. • As the Earth cooled, H2O vapor condensed to form liquid H2O, and rain collected in oceans. Monomer Evolve • There are three hypotheses that explain how organic monomers could have evolved. • Hypothesis one: Monomers came from outer space – Comets and meteorites, perhaps carrying organic chemicals, have pelted the Earth throughout history. – A meteorite from Mars (ALH84001) that landed on Earth 13,000 years ago, may have fossilized bacteria. • Hypothesis two: monomers came from reactions in the atmosphere – Oparin/Haldane independently suggested organic molecules could be formed in the presence of outside energy sources using atmospheric gases. – Experiments performed by Miller and Urey (1953) showed experimentally that these gases (methane, ammonia, hydrogen, water) reacted with one another to produce small organic molecules (amino acids, organic acids). – Lack of oxidation and decay allowed organic molecules to form a thick, warm organic soup. • Hypothesis three: monomers came from reactions at hydrothermal vents – Ammonia may have been scarce in the early atmosphere; undersea thermal vents, which line ocean ridges, might have been responsible for converting nitrogen to ammonia. – Under ventlike conditions, 70% of various nitrogen sources were converted to ammonia within 15 minutes. Polymers Evolve • Gunter Wachterschaüser and Claudia Huber have shown that organic molecules will react and amino acids will form peptides in the presence of iron-nickel sulfides under ventlike conditions. • Protein-first Hypothesis – Sidney Fox demonstrated amino acids polymerize abiotically if exposed to dry heat. – Amino acids collected in shallow puddles along the rocky shore; heat of the sun caused them to form proteinoids (i.e., small polypeptides that have some catalytic properties). – When proteinoids are returned to water, they form cell-like microspheres composed of protein. – This assumes DNA genes came after protein enzymes; DNA replication needs protein enzymes. • The Clay Hypothesis – Graham Cairns-Smith suggests that amino acids polymerize in clay, with radioactivity providing energy. – Clay attracts small organic molecules and contains iron and zinc atoms serving as inorganic catalysts for polypeptide formation. – If RNA nucleotides and amino acids became associated so polypeptides were ordered by and helped synthesize RNA, then polypeptides and RNA arose at the same time. • RNA-first Hypothesis – Only the macromolecule RNA was needed at the beginning to lead to the first cell. – Thomas Cech and Sidney Altman discovered that RNA can be both a substrate and an enzyme. – RNA would carry out processes of life associated with DNA (in genes) and protein enzymes. A Protocell Evolves • Before the first true cell arose, there would have been a protocell or protobiont. • A protocell would have a lipid-protein membrane and carry on energy metabolism. • Sidney Fox showed that if lipids are made available to microspheres, lipids become associated with microspheres producing a lipid-protein membrane. • Alec Bangham discovered that when he extracted lipids from egg yolks and placed them in water, the lipids would naturally organize themselves into doublelayered bubbles roughly the size of a cell. Bangham’s bubbles soon became known as liposomes. Fluorescent image of a liposome with a fluorophore-labeled phospholipid incorporated in the bilayer. • David Deamer and Bangham realized that liposomes might have provided life’s first boundary. Perhaps liposomes with a phospholipid membrane engulfed early molecules that had enzymatic, even replicative abilities. These investigators called this the “membrane-first” hypothesis. A Self-Replication System Evolves • Cairns-Smith suggests that polypeptides and RNA evolved simultaneously. – The first true cell would contain RNA genes that replicated because of the presence of proteins; they become associated in clay in such a way that the polypeptides catalyzed RNA formation. • Once the protocell was capable of reproduction, it became a true cell and biological evolution began. A Recap of the Steps • Most biologists suspect life evolved in basic steps. – Abiotic synthesis of organic molecules such as amino acids occurred in the atmosphere or at hydrothermal vents. – Monomers joined together to form polymers at seaside rocks or clay, or at vents; the first polymers could have been proteins or RNA or both. – Polymers aggregated inside a plasma membrane to make a protocell that had limited ability to grow; if it developed in the ocean it was a heterotroph, if at a hydrothermal vent, a chemoautotroph. – Once the protocell contained DNA genes or RNA molecules, it was a true cell. Fig. 18.4 History of Life • Fossils Tell a Story – A fossil is the remains or traces of past life, usually preserved in sedimentary rock. – Paleontology is the study of fossils and the history of life, ancient climates, and environments. – The great majority of fossils are found embedded in or recently eroded from sedimentary rock. – Sedimentation has been going on since the Earth was formed; it is an accumulation of particles forming a stratum, a recognizable layer in a stratigraphic sequence laid down on land or in water. – The sequence indicates the age of fossils; a stratum is older than the one above it and younger than the one below it. • Relative Dating of Fossils – However, geologists discovered that strata of the same age contain the same fossils, termed index fossils. – Therefore, fossils can be used for the relative dating of strata. – A particular species of fossil ammonite is found over a wide range and for a limited time period; therefore, all strata in the world that contain this ammonite are of the same age. • Absolute Dating of Fossils – Absolute dating relies on radioactive dating to determine the actual age of fossils. – Radioactive isotopes have a half-life, the time it takes for half of a radioactive isotope to change into a stable element. – Carbon 14 (14C) is a radioactive isotope contained within organic matter. •Half of the carbon 14 (14C) will change to nitrogen 14 (14N) every 5,730 years. •Comparing 14C radioactivity of a fossil to modern organic matter calculates the age of the fossil. •After 50,000 years, the 14C radioactivity is so low it cannot be used to measure age accurately. – It is possible to determine the ratio of potassium 40 (40K) and argon 40 to date rocks and infer the age of a fossil. The Precambrian Time • As a result of their study of fossils in strata, geologists have devised the geologic time scale, which divides the history of the Earth into eras and then periods and epochs. • The first cells were probably prokaryotes. • Prokaryotes, the archaea and bacteria, can live in the most inhospitable of environments which may typify habitats on early Earth. Table 18.1 Eukaryotic Cells Arise • The eukaryotic cell, which originated around 2.1 BYA, is nearly always aerobic and contains a nucleus as well as other membranous organelles. • The nucleus may have developed by an invagination of the plasma membrane. • The mitochondria of the eukaryotic cells were once free-living aerobic bacteria, and the chloroplasts were free-living photosynthetic prokaryotes. • The endosymbiotic theory states that a nucleated cell engulfed these prokaryotes, which then became organelles. The evidence for the theory is the following: – Present-day mitochondria and chloroplasts have a size that lies within the range of that for bacteria. – Mitochondria and chloroplasts have their own DNA and make some of their own proteins. – Mitochondria and chloroplasts divide by binary fission similar to bacteria. – The outer membrane of mitochondria and chloroplasts differ. Fig. 18.7