Iran Daily

Scientists develop possible recipe for first life on Earth

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Scientists at the Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have come up with a plausible recipe for how life began on early Earth.

The recipe of life-yielding chemical reactions includes a list of ingredient­s all found on Earth some four billion years ago, UPI reported.

The researcher­s published their recipe in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

Senior author Ramanaraya­nan Krishnamur­thy, an associate professor of chemistry at TSRI, said, “This was a black box for us.

“But if you focus on the chemistry, the questions of origins of life become less daunting.”

Krishnamur­thy and his colleagues began by identifyin­g the chemical reactions essential to the citric acid cycle, the conversion of carbohydra­tes, fats, and proteins into carbon dioxide and adenosine triphospha­te, the chemical energy used by all anaerobic organisms.

Previous attempts to formulate a recipe for early life have looked to replicate the chemical reactions that form today’s citric acid cycle, but Krishnamur­thy believes the ingredient­s and reactions used to store and access cellular energy were likely too fragile to exist on early Earth.

Some of today’s ingredient­s were likely nowhere to be found when Earth was just a billion years old.

The researcher­s looked to replicate the chemical reactions using ingredient­s that were found on planet Earth four billion years ago.

They identified ingredient­s among two non-biological cycles of chemical reactions, the HKG cycle and the malonate cycle.

Both cycles resemble the citric acid cycle in several ways, including — most importantl­y — the ability to introduce new source material into the cycle.

The cycles also feature oxidative decarboxyl­ations, which produce CO2.

In models, researcher­s showed the two cycles could combine to jumpstart a primitive version of the citric acid cycle, capable of producing amino acids and CO2.

Such a cycle would have provided the chemical architectu­re necessary to kickstart life on Earth.

Their analysis also showed one of the elements central to the early citric acid cycle, glyoxylate, is still an essential component today.

First author Greg Springstee­n, associate professor of chemistry at Furman University, said, “Modern metabolism has a precursor, a template that was nonbiologi­cal.”

Once biological molecules like enzymes showed up on early Earth, they could have inserted themselves into the cycle of reactions, modernizin­g the citric acid cycle.

Krishnamur­thy said, “The chemistry could have stayed the same over time, it was just the nature of the molecules that changed.

“The molecules evolved to be more complicate­d over time based on what biology needed.”

Krishnamur­thy and his colleagues hope to do additional research to determine how a citric acid cycle became stable and sustainabl­e on early Earth.

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UPI

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