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Page 1: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

The Origin of Life on Earth

The Origin of Life on Earth

Page 2: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

ObjectivesObjectivesD.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life.D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of Miller & Urey into the origin of organic compounds.D.1.3 – State that comets may have delivered organic

compounds to Earth.D.1.4 – Discuss possible locations where conditions would have allowed synthesis of organic compounds.D.1.5 – Outline two properties of RNA that would have

allowed it to play a role in the origin of life.D.1.6 – State that living cells may have been preceded

by protobionts, with an internal chemical en- vironment different from their surroundings.

Page 3: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Objectives (cont’d.)Objectives (cont’d.)

D.1.7 – Outline the contribution of prokaryotes to the creation of an oxygen-rich atmosphere.D.1.8 – Discuss the endosymbiont theory for the origin of eukaryotes.

Page 4: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

The early EarthThe early EarthLife on Earth originated between 3.5 & 4.0 billion yrs

ago.Earth formed about 4.5 billion years ago, but left-over rocks bombarded the surface for the first few 100 million yrs, making it unlikely life could survive. Oldest rocks found today are 4.2 billion years old.Oldest fossils are in rocks from western Australia from 3.8 billion yrs ago -

resemble bacteria, sug- gesting that

life originated much earlier, possibly as early as 3.9 billion yrs ago,

when Earth began to cool below 100o C.

Page 5: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Origin of life on EarthOrigin of life on EarthRecall: A hypothesis is a testable explanation for 1 observation;

where-as a theory is a collection of related & tested hypotheses that can support a broad range of observations.

One major theory of biology attempts to explain how life began. There are three possibilities:

1) Divine creation - life was put on Earth by divine forces. This idea can’t be tested by science; it requires religious faith.

Page 6: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Origin of life on EarthOrigin of life on EarthHow did life develop on Earth? Three possibilities:

2) Extraterrestrial origin - life was carried to Earth upon a meteorite or asteroid. We can test this idea by collecting samples from meteorites, but so far this idea is not proven. We can also search for life on other planets - SETI project.

Meteorite Crater, Arizona, USA

Page 7: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Origin of life on EarthOrigin of life on EarthHow did life develop on Earth? Three possibilities:

3) Abiogenesis (Origin from nonliving matter) - random events over 100s of millions of years produced self-replicating molecules, and natural selection acted upon these to produce the first cell. This is a testable hypothesis.

There are 4 steps in this hypothesis:a) the synthesis of simple organic molecules, b) the assembly of these molecules into polymers, c) the origin of self replicating molecules that made

inheritance possible, and d) packaging of these molecules into membranes with an

internal chemistry different than their surroundings.

Page 8: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Non-living synthesis of organic moleculesNon-living synthesis of organic molecules

Experiments of Miller and Urey, who created, in the laboratory, the atmospheric conditions that had been postulated for early Earth.

They discharged electrical sparks in a simulated at-

mosphere of H2O, H2, CH4, and NH3.

They produced a variety of amino acids and other organic molecules.

(Repeatable by other scientists.)

Miller-Urey apparatus (right): in vitro

Water re-circulates many times

Page 9: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Locations of organic synthesisLocations of organic synthesisWhere were these organic molecules first

produced?Submerged volcanoes and deep-sea vents where hot water & minerals gush into the deep ocean from below ground.

Page 10: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Locations of organic synthesisLocations of organic synthesisChemistry around oceanic volcanoes

Page 11: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Locations of organic synthesisLocations of organic synthesisWhere were these organic molecules first

produced?Extraterrestrial locations – brought within meteors

from Mars, other planetsfrom other solar systems

Casings found withina meteor from Mars, announced in 1996,resemble bacteria.

Page 12: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Importance of RNA in the origin of lifeImportance of RNA in the origin of lifeRNA may have been the first genetic material.

Life is defined partly by inheritance.Many researchers have proposed that the

first hereditary ma-terial was RNA, not DNA.

Notice the RNA can bind with itself.

Page 13: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Importance of RNA in the origin of lifeImportance of RNA in the origin of lifeRNA can function as an enzyme.

In the lab, short polymers of RNA can be synthesized abiotically.Add these to a solution of ribonucleotide monomers, and

sequences up to 10 bases long are copied from the template according to the base-pairing rules.If zinc is added, sequences may reach 40 nucleotides with less than 1% error.

Page 14: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Importance of RNA in the origin of lifeImportance of RNA in the origin of lifeLab experiments demonstrate that RNA

sequences are self-replicating and can evolve in abiotic conditions.

RNA molecules have a genotype (nucleotide sequence) and a phenotype (3-dimensional shape).In certain conditions, some RNA sequences are more stable and replicate faster and with fewer errors.Occasional copying errors create mutations, and

natural selection screens these for stability or for best self-replication.

Page 15: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Protobionts preceded living cellsProtobionts preceded living cellsProtobionts have some of the properties of life

and can form by self-assembly.Protobionts... encapsulated chemical reactivity 

catalyze chemical reactions,aggregates of pre-biotic molecules, or macromolecules that acquire a boundary to maintain an interior chemical environment that is different from the “primordial soup”. Examples:

Coacervates Proteinoid microspheresLiposomes

Page 16: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Protobionts preceded living cellsProtobionts preceded living cellsCoacervates - droplets of charged organic

material that form spontaneously in water; (1-100 μm in diameter)

They are surrounded by a film of bound water molecules and held together by hydrophobic forces. They possess osmotic properties, and They allow absorption of simple molecules.

Can store enzymes

Page 17: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Protobionts preceded living cellsProtobionts preceded living cellsProteinoid microspheres - water filled vesicles

surrounded by a protein boundary .If a dry mixture of amino acids is heated to 130-180o C they polymerize; If these are then cooled in water they form small spheres about 2 μm in diameter.They have an osmotically active boundary which can be seen as a double layer.

Page 18: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Protobionts preceded living cellsProtobionts preceded living cellsLiposomes – vesicles surrounded by lipid bilayers.

These undergo osmotic swelling or shrinking in different salt concentrations.They also store energy as a voltage cross the surface.Liposomes grow by engulfing smaller liposomes or by

“giving birth” to smaller liposomes.They can maintain an inter-

nal chemical environment different from their sur-roundings and show prop-erties associated with life:

metabolism, excitability.

Page 19: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Creation of an oxygen atmosphereCreation of an oxygen atmosphereProkaryotes dominate from 3.5 to 2.0 billion yrs ago.

For the first ¾ of evolutionary history, Earth's only organ-isms were microscopic and mostly unicellular (no nucleus)Relatively early, prokaryotes diverged into two main evolutionary branches, the bacteria and the archaea.Rich sources

for early prokaryote fossils are stromatolites (fossilized

layered micro-bial mats) and sediment from

ancient hydro- thermal vents.

Page 20: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Oxygen began accumulating in the atmosphere 2.7 bya.

Cyanobacteria, photosynthetic organisms that split water & produce O2 as a byproduct, evolved over 2.7 bya. This early O2 initially reacted with dissolved iron to form Fe2O3 (rust) as seen today in banded iron rock formations.

Creation of an oxygen atmosphereCreation of an oxygen atmosphere

Page 21: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Creation of an oxygen atmosphereCreation of an oxygen atmosphereAtmospheric O2 was slow to rise until 2.2 bya,

when it shot up to 10% of current values.“Corrosive” O2 doomed many many prokaryotes.Some survived in habitats that remained anaerobic.Others (cyanobacteria)

evolved cellular respir-ation, using O2 to help

harvest the energy stored in organic molecules.

Ozone developed from O2

in the upper atmosphere,allowing life to come outonto the land ~500 mya.

Algae & plants made more O2.

Page 22: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Theory of endosymbiosisTheory of endosymbiosisSome biologists believe that eukaryotes

descended from prokaryotes. Evidence suggests that chloroplasts and mitochondria descended from free-living pro-karyotic cells. This theory was developed by

D. Lynn Margulis and is called the endosymbiont theory.

Page 23: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

Theory of endosymbiosisTheory of endosymbiosisMitochondria & chloroplasts came from free-living

bacteria.Both have circular DNA similar to bacteria.Both have ribosomes similar to bacteria; make proteins.Both reproduce themselves, and sizes are similar.

Page 24: The Origin of Life on Earth. Objectives D.1.1 – Describe four processes needed for the spontan- eous origin of life. D.1.2 – Outline the experiments of

History of life on Earth

History of life on Earth

Green algae

Plants