Origin of Life
Origin of Life
Origin of Life
The
cradle
of life
University of Washington, IFE, URI-IAO, NOAA
Baffling boundaries
Even more baffling, says Martin, neither the
cell membranes nor the cell walls have any
details in common. At face value, the defining
boundaries of cells evolved independently in
bacteria and archaea, he says.
But if thats the case, what sort of a cell
was this common ancestor? A cell with no
boundary? Impossible! Something unique?
If you exclude the impossible, then whatever
you are left with must be true.
If Martin is right, the last common ancestor
of life on Earth was a sophisticated entity in
terms of its genes and proteins, and was
powered by proton currents rather than
fermentation. Yet at the same time, its
bounding membranes were apparently
different to anything found today. It was
life, but not as we know it.
Then, around 2002, Martin came across the
work of Russell. Until that time, Russell had
been a lone voice. His geochemical ideas about
the origin of life didnt go down well with the
molecular biologists who dominated the field.
From the early 1990s, Russell had been
exploring the possibilities of a very particular
kind of hydrothermal vent, called an alkaline
vent, at the time known only from remnants
found in ancient rocks. Unlike the black
smokers discovered in 1977, formed by the
violent reaction of seawater with volcanic
lava rising up at the mid-ocean ridges,
Russells vents were much tamer affairs,
little more than bubbly rocks riddled with
labyrinthine pores.
These vents form when water reacts with
the mineral olivine, which is common in the
sea floor (and would have been even more
common early on, before the Earths crust
thickened). The process produces a new
mineral, serpentine, and releases hydrogen,
alkaline fluids and heat. It also makes the rocks
expand and crack, allowing more water to
percolate down, sustaining the reaction. The
RNA world
Laboratory experiments by a team led by
Nobel prize-winner Jack Szostak of Harvard
University, published earlier this year, have
confirmed that these conditions do indeed
concentrate nucleotides and nucleic acids.
The team also found that fatty acids become