AI Article Synopsis

  • Non-equilibrium conditions were essential for the early assembly of informational polymers like RNA by providing a stable environment for their formation and enrichment.
  • Gas bubbles in thermally varying water, similar to conditions on early Earth, facilitate the continuous accumulation of prebiotic molecules and enhance their chemical activities.
  • These processes lead to key developments such as RNA phosphorylation, increased ribozyme activity, hydrogel formation, crystallization, and the creation of protective vesicle aggregates, all occurring in under 30 minutes, indicating a feasible pathway for the onset of molecular evolution.

Article Abstract

Non-equilibrium conditions must have been crucial for the assembly of the first informational polymers of early life, by supporting their formation and continuous enrichment in a long-lasting environment. Here, we explore how gas bubbles in water subjected to a thermal gradient, a likely scenario within crustal mafic rocks on the early Earth, drive a complex, continuous enrichment of prebiotic molecules. RNA precursors, monomers, active ribozymes, oligonucleotides and lipids are shown to (1) cycle between dry and wet states, enabling the central step of RNA phosphorylation, (2) accumulate at the gas-water interface to drastically increase ribozymatic activity, (3) condense into hydrogels, (4) form pure crystals and (5) encapsulate into protecting vesicle aggregates that subsequently undergo fission. These effects occur within less than 30 min. The findings unite, in one location, the physical conditions that were crucial for the chemical emergence of biopolymers. They suggest that heated microbubbles could have hosted the first cycles of molecular evolution.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41557-019-0299-5DOI Listing

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