From Cytoplasm to Environment: The Inorganic Ingredients for the Origin of Life

Novoselov, Alexey A.; Serrano, Paloma; Alves Forancelli Pacheco, Mirian Liza; Chaffin, Michael Scott; O'Malley-James, Jack Thomas; Moreno, Susan Carla; Ribeiro, Filipe Batista

Abstract

Early in its history, Earth's surface developed from an uninhabitable magma ocean to a place where life could emerge. The first organisms, lacking ion transporters, fixed the composition of their cradle environment in their intracellular fluid. Later, though life adapted and spread, it preserved some qualities of its initial environment within. Modern prokaryotes could thus provide insights into the conditions of early Earth and the requirements for the emergence of life. In this work, we constrain Earth's life-forming environment through detailed analysis of prokaryotic intracellular fluid. Rigorous assessment of the constraints placed on the early Earth environment by intracellular liquid will provide insight into the conditions of abiogenesis, with implications not only for our understanding of early Earth but also the formation of life elsewhere in the Universe.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000316861100007 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: ASTROBIOLOGY
Volumen: 13
Número: 3
Editorial: Mary Ann Liebert Inc.
Fecha de publicación: 2013
Página de inicio: 294
Página final: 302
DOI:

10.1089/ast.2012.0836

Notas: ISI