scholarly journals Abiotic nanofluidic environments induce prebiotic condensation in water

Author(s):  
A. Greiner de Herrera ◽  
T. Markert ◽  
F. Trixler

Abstract A long-standing, central problem in the research on the chemical evolution towards the origin of life is the so-called “water paradox”: Despite life depends on liquid water, key biochemical reactions such as nucleotide condensation are inhibited by it. Current hypotheses addressing this paradox have low prebiotic plausibility when taking the conservative nature of evolution into account. We report spontaneous, abiotic RNA synthesis in water driven by nanofluidic effects in temporal nanoconfinements of aqueous particle suspensions. Our findings provide a solution of the water paradox in a multifaceted way: abiotic, temporal nanofluidic environments allow prebiotic condensation reaction pathways in water under stable, moderate conditions, emerge in suspensions as a geologically ubiquitous and thus prebiotic highly plausible environment and are consistent with evolutionary conservatism as living cells also work with temporal nanoconfined water.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Greiner de Herrera ◽  
T. Markert ◽  
F. Trixler

Abstract A long-standing, crucial problem in the research on the chemical evolution towards the origin of life is the so-called ‘water paradox’. It states that although water is essential to life, key chemical reactions such as the synthesis of RNA are inhibited by it. Current hypotheses addressing this paradox have low prebiotic plausibility when taking the conservative nature of evolution into account. Here, we report spontaneous abiotic RNA formation in aqueous environments. The synthesis is driven by nanofluidic phenomena that alter critical properties of water. Our findings provide a solution to the paradox in a multifaceted way: abiotic, temporal nanofluidic confinements allow prebiotic condensation reaction pathways in water under stable, moderate conditions, emerge in aqueous particle suspensions as a geologically ubiquitous and thus prebiotic highly plausible environment and are consistent with the principle that evolution builds on existing pathways, as living cells also work with temporal nanoconfined water.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Greiner de Herrera ◽  
T. Markert ◽  
F. Trixler

Abstract A long-standing, crucial problem in the research on the chemical evolution towards the origin of life is the so-called ‘water paradox’. It states that although water is essential to life, key chemical reactions such as the synthesis of RNA are inhibited by it. Current hypotheses addressing this paradox have low prebiotic plausibility when taking the conservative nature of evolution into account. Here, we report spontaneous abiotic RNA formation in aqueous environments. The synthesis is driven by nanofluidic phenomena that alter critical properties of water. Our findings provide a solution to the paradox in a multifaceted way: abiotic, temporal nanofluidic confinements allow prebiotic condensation reaction pathways in water under stable, moderate conditions, emerge in aqueous particle suspensions as a geologically ubiquitous and thus prebiotic highly plausible environment and are consistent with the principle that evolution builds on existing pathways, as living cells also work with temporal nanoconfined water.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Greiner de Herrera ◽  
Frank Trixler

<p class="western">The "water paradox" is an obstinate problem in the research on the chemical evolution towards the emergence of life. It states that although aqueous environments are essential for life, they hamper key condensation reactions such as nucleotide polymerisation. To overcome this paradox several hypotheses have been proposed, including scenarios based on alternative solvents like formamide, condensing agents like cyanamide, high temperatures of over 150 °C or wet/dry cycles in surface ponds. However, when appraising the prebiotic plausibility of such scenarios some general weaknesses appear. Besides the fact that all known life manages the water paradox without needing such proposed conditions, the principle that evolution builds on existing pathways indicates that the same physicochemical effects were probably involved in the abiotic origin of biopolymers as now being tapped by life via complex enzymes.</p> <p class="western">Here we show that abiotic temporal nanoconfinements of water can act as natural reactions vessels for prebiotic RNA formation. We present evidence for spontaneous, abiotic polymerisation of nucleotides in water. According to our results the reaction is enabled by the rise of anomalous properties of water when being temporarily confined between nanoscale separated particles of geological ubiquity within aqueous suspensions. These findings can solve the water paradox in such a way that nanofluidic effects in aqueous particle suspensions open up an abiotic route to biopolymerisation and polymer stabilisation under chemical and thermodynamic conditions which also exist within the intracellular environment of living cells. The fact that polymerase enzymes also form temporal nanoconfined water clusters inside their active site implies that the same physico-chemical effects are tapped for nucleotide condensation in water both by biochemical pathways and the reported abiotic route. This indicates that our model is consistent with evolutionary conservatism stretching back to the era of prebiotic chemical evolution. The consistency is further supported by the fact that water is not trapped by nanoconfinements within the polymerase core but can exchange with the surrounding intracellular fluid – a situation which is also prevalent in nanofluidic environments within aqueous particle suspensions. Our experimental finding that under the reported conditions an amino acid catalyses the abiotic polymerisation of nucleotides may give a hint to a nanofluidic origin of cooperation between amino acids and nucleotides evolving to the interdependent synthesis of proteins and nucleic acids in living cells.</p> <p class="western">The effect of abiotic RNA polymerisation in temporal nanoconfined water does not depend on highly specific mineral species and geological environments as watery suspensions of micro- and nanoparticles are virtually ubiquitous – they exist, for example, in the form of sediments with pore water, hydrothermal vent fluids containing precipitated inorganic and polyaromatic particles or dispersed aggregates inside water-filled cracks in the crust of the earth and possibly of icy moons in the outer solar system.</p> <p class="western"><strong>References</strong></p> <p class="western">Greiner de Herrera, A., Markert, T. & Trixler, F. Temporal nanofluidic confinements induce prebiotic condensation in water. Preprint, DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-163645/v3</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
V.V. Matveev

AbstractA hypothesis is proposed about potassium ponds being the cradles of life enriches the gamut of ideas about the possible conditions of pre-biological evolution on the primeval Earth, but does not bring us closer to solving the real problem of the origin of life. The gist of the matter lies in the mechanism of making a delimitation between two environments – the intracellular environment and the habitat of protocells. Since the sodium–potassium pump (Na+/K+-ATPase) was discovered, no molecular model has been proposed for a predecessor of the modern sodium pump. This has brought into life the idea of the potassium pond, wherein protocells would not need a sodium pump. However, current notions of the operation of living cells come into conflict with even physical laws when trying to use them to explain the origin and functioning of protocells. Thus, habitual explanations of the physical properties of living cells have become inapplicable to explain the corresponding properties of Sidney Fox's microspheres. Likewise, existing approaches to solving the problem of the origin of life do not see the need for the comparative study of living cells and cell models, assemblies of biological and artificial small molecules and macromolecules under physical conditions conducive to the origin of life. The time has come to conduct comprehensive research into the fundamental physical properties of protocells and create a new discipline – protocell physiology or protophysiology – which should bring us much closer to solving the problem of the origin of life.


1980 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 379-401 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linda G. Pleasant ◽  
Cyril Ponnamperuma

1975 ◽  
Vol 6 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 285-298 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martha W. West ◽  
Elizabeth D. Gill ◽  
Keith A. Kvenvolden

1977 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martha W. West

2007 ◽  
Vol 4 (12) ◽  
pp. 2674-2702 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernd M. Rode ◽  
Daniel Fitz ◽  
Thomas Jakschitz

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