Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Astronomy190 - Topics in Astronomy Astronomy and Astrobiology Lecture 12 : Origin of Life on Earth Ty Robinson.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Astronomy190 - Topics in Astronomy Astronomy and Astrobiology Lecture 12 : Origin of Life on Earth Ty Robinson."— Presentation transcript:

1 Astronomy190 - Topics in Astronomy Astronomy and Astrobiology Lecture 12 : Origin of Life on Earth Ty Robinson

2 Questions of the Day What is the evidence for the timing of life’s origin? What are some key components needed for the origin of life? What are some possible settings for the origin of life? What is the RNA world, and what role would it have had in the origin of life?

3 The CO 2 Cycle as a Thermostat (-) Surface temperature Rainfall Silicate weathering rate Atmospheric CO 2 Greenhouse effect (Timescale ~ Millions of Years)

4 “We are the embodiment of a cosmos grown to self awareness. We have begun to contemplate our origins. Star stuff pondering the stars.” - Carl Sagan (1934-1996)

5 ? ?

6 Spontaneous Generation “… of these instances of spontaneous generation some come from putrefying earth or vegetable matter, as is the case with a number of insects, while others are spontaneously generated in the inside of animals out of the secretions of their several organs.” - Aristotle (384-322 BC)

7 Darwin and common ancestry

8 “…But if (and oh! what a big if!) we could conceive in some warm little pond, with all sorts of ammonia and phosphoric salts, light, heat, electricity, &c., present, that a protein compound was chemically formed ready to undergo still more complex changes, at the present day such matter would be instantly absorbed, which would not have been the case before living creatures were found. “ - Charles Darwin (1809-1882)

9 ? Main questions about the origin of life When? (Archean? Hadean?) Where? (Ice? Vents? Warm little pond?) How? (Chemical and biochemical evolution?) What? (First replicating molecules? First cell? Last Universal Common Ancestor?)

10 When? Stromatolites: 3.5 billion years ago Microfossils: 3.5 billion years ago Isotope fractionation (life is lazy): 3.85 billion years ago

11 Where? What did the Earth look like ~3.9-3.5 billion years ago? Valley et al., 2002 LHB pummeled Earth until ~3.8 Ga possibly very little continental mass lots of hydrothermal activity atmospheric composition still under debate, no oxygen Why is this a problem for the origin of life?

12 Where? What are the essential things a setting should have to be ideal for the origin of life? Carbon source organic molecules to make the building blocks of life Concentration and catalysis we need to get a high enough concentration of ingredients to make reactions happen reactions can happen more quickly with a catalyst Energy source (to power many chemical reactions, we need to be able to transfer electrons) --> a setting should have some molecules that can be electron donors or electron acceptors

13 Questions? Which of the following are not found/met in the atmospheres of giant planets? ingredients - carbon sources energy source concentration energy source & concentration

14 Where? Primordial soup (open ocean or “warm little pond”) Pros: organic molecules from ocean floor, delivery by meteorites lightning produces electron acceptors Cons: too dilute no means of concentrating materials

15 The Miller-Urey Experiment, 1950s Where did the organic molecules to make life come from? Miller and Urey simulated the early ocean and atmosphere with “lightning” Gas cooled and “rained” down into a flask: organic compounds were created Now: “atmosphere” composition probably incorrect

16 Where? Photo credit: Marcela Ewert Sarmiento Sea ice Pros: concentrates organic molecules in brine pockets complex molecules are stable in cold temperatures Cons: source of organic molecules? energy source? slow reaction rates

17 Where? Hydrothermal vents Pros: good energy source (molecules for giving and receiving electrons) minerals can concentrate molecules and catalyze reactions production of organic molecules last universal common ancestor a thermophile? Cons: some nutrients missing high temperatures destroy some molecules

18 How (and what)? DNA RN A pro tein transcription translation “master copy” “working copy”

19 How (and what)? DNA RN A pro tein transcription translation

20 The RNA World Natural selection in action: RNA molecules that were better at making copies of themselves were more “fit” RNA as both information molecule and catalyst? The first “evolving” entity may have been an RNA molecule

21 The RNA World Franchi & Ferris, 2002 How was RNA first made? Clays may have played a role Eventually, proteins (somehow) took over as the catalysts and DNA (somehow) became the main information molecule. DNA RNA protein transcription translation How did it start? How did it end?

22 Questions? If clays did play an important role in the origin of life, which of the following are good sites for life’s origin? hydrothermal vents Earth’s early beaches ice warm pond

23 Encapsulation Important because it kept beneficial molecules within the cell without being released to the environment (natural selection can act on the whole cell) Still unknown: –When did it happen? –How did it happen? Lipid vesicles from a meteorite RNA in a lipid membrane (made in lab)

24 An (oversimplified) summary “the molecular biologist’s dream”

25 LUCA: Our last universal common ancestor thermophilic biofilm LUCA

26 How do viruses fit into all this? Three hypotheses for the origin of viruses: 1.Degenerative theory (cells gone rogue) 2.“Escaped” genetic elements (genes gone rogue) 3.Vestiges of the prebiotic world (rogue since the beginning)

27 How do viruses fit into all this? Are viruses remnants of the RNA world? Did viruses “come up with” DNA first, and then give it to cells? Forterre, 2005.

28 Did life originate more than once? Would it be immediately be consumed by pre-existing life? conditions for origin of life might not be right for maintenance of life “Shadow biosphere?”

29 Panspermia ?

30 Questions of the Day What is the evidence for the timing of life’s origin? What are some key components needed for the origin of life? What are some possible settings for the origin of life? What is the RNA world, and what role would it have had in the origin of life?

31 Origin of eukaryotes? Lots of disagreement still goes on about this! (When? How? In what order?) “Endosymbiotic theory”


Download ppt "Astronomy190 - Topics in Astronomy Astronomy and Astrobiology Lecture 12 : Origin of Life on Earth Ty Robinson."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google