[Last Update: June 28th, 2018]
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D. Jon Scott’s Website ► Science ► Physics ► Chemistry ► Organic Chemistry ► Chemistry ► Biology ► MicrobiologyProkaryotes
Copyright © 2018 by Dustin Jon Scott
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The half-lives of the nucleobases guanine, adenine, cytosine, and uracil are far too short (t½ for adenine and guanine ≈ 1 year; uracil = 12 years; cytosine = 19 days) at the 80-110°C temperatures hypothesized in hydrothermal vent scenarios for the origin of life (based on the preferred temperature ranges of hyperthermophiles, assumed by hydrothermal vent scenarios to be among the oldest extant lineages of living things), and indeed are too unstable at temperatures much above 0°C, to allow for the formation of the first replicators in a reasonably long timespan, indicating a low-temperature origin of life (Levy & Miller, 1998). |
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RNA hydrolyzes rapidly (Szostak, 2012; part 3), and is especially prone to doing so in hot environments, much to the chagrin of those who favor hydrothermal vent models for the origin of life. |
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While hydrothermal vent hypotheses imply a hyperthermophilic progenote with an optimal growth temperature (OGT) ≥80°C, which is consistent with thermophilia (OGT=65±15°C) in the last bacterial ancestor as well as the last archaeal ancestor as part of a more-or-less linear progression to the overwhelmingly mesophilic (OGT≤50°C) modern prokaryotic domains, dual phylogenic rRNA and protein analyses show that while both the bacterial ancestor and the archaeal ancestor were thermophilic (OGT=65°C±15°C), the LUCA was mesophilic with an OGT≤50°C (Boussau et al., 2008). |
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The very first protocells were likely obligate cryophiles with an OGT≈1°C (Szostak, 2012; part 1) |
The hydrothermal vent model, though seemingly ruled out, would give us a mathematically elegant and thermodynamically sensible sequence of OGT≥80°C, OGT=65±15°C, OGT≤50°C and a cellular LUCA model gives us a progressive OGT≈0°C, OGT≤50°C, OGT=65±15°C thermotolerance sequence before a general decline to OGT≤50°C with a few modern lineages OGT=65±15°C or even OGT≥80°C, while a precellular LUCA model merely gives us an OGT≤50°C; OGT≥50°C threshold separating the cryophilic-to-mesophilic nucleobases, RNA, LUCA, and protocells, and the thermophilic-to-hyperthermophilic first true lifeforms, followed eventually by diversification into various levels of thermotolerance.
Cool Early Earth model.
Here, however, we run into another problem. Water is highly corrosive, and would've been deadly to the first RNA-based replicators (Barras, 2014)
Hydrolysis (Benner et al., 2012)
The hardiness of bacteria features in many lithopanspermia models, the most conservative of which are interplanetary lithopanspermia models, most relavent to we Earthlings in the hypothetical case of Mars-Earth interplanetary lithopanspermia, in which life found its way to Earth from our neighbor, Mars.
We know that bacteria could have been ejected into space by planetary impacts (Stoffler et al. 2006), survive the subsequent rapid acceleration (Mastrapaa et al. 2001), survive exposure to vacuum and high radiation (Saffary et al., 2002; Bucker & Horneck, 1970; Horneck, 1971; Nicholson, et al. 2005), thrive and grow in asteroidal and meteoritic interiors (Mautner 2002), survive re-entry into a planetary atmosphere (blah) and subsequent impact (blah),
Deinococcus radiodurans, first isolated in Corvallis, Oregon, in 1956 (Anderson, et al.)
Radioresistance in bacteria. Mars fertile for life before Earth.
(Fajardo-Cavazos et al., 1997)
“So, back to the period of heavy bombardment and with computer simulations you can, you can model what happens when an impact hits a planetary surface. And it's not much different from if you sprinkle Cheerios on a bed [...] and then you smack the surface of the bed, there's a— a sort of a recoil in effect and Cheerios pop upwards. It turns out Mars may have been wet — we've known at some point it had water — and fertile for life before Earth, and at this period of heavy bombardment if it had started life — surely it would've been simple life, as we've no reason to think otherwise — we've learned bacteria can be quite hardy, as I'm sure you know, so we imagine a bacterial stowaway in the nooks and crannies in one of these rocks that are cast back into space. In fact if you do the calculation, there's hundreds of tons of Mars rocks that should that should have fallen to Earth by now, over the history of the Solar system. Maybe one of those rocks carried life from Mars to Earth, seeding life on Earth. My great disappointment would be going to Mars and finding Mars life based on DNA. That it would not've been a separate experiment in life.” — Neil Degrasse Tyson to Richard Dawkins (Dawkins & Tyson, 2016, 6:05-7:24 minutes in)
Microbe-containing impact ejecta from Earth may be subsequently pulverized by collisions into micron-sized particles that, though large enough to contain colonies of microbial life and shield them from UV radiation, would be small enough to be carried out to the Kuiper Belt via Solar winds eventually to be deposited in the protoplanetary discs of future planetary systems as the Solar system moves through interstellar dust clouds in its course through the Milky Way (Wallis, 2003; Napier, 2003), seeding the Milky Way in just a few billion years, which, considering any Earth-like planet could hypothetically have done the same, makes it highly unlikely that Earth Herself was not a benefactor of such a process (Napier, 2003).
It's entirely possible that the reason why so much of the “biological evidence" for panspermia is related to the hardiness of bacteria isn't because all of life on Earth ultimately descends from a Martian ancestor, but because bacterial life specifically evolved on Mars.
The apparent "biological" evidence for independent origins, which mainly has to do with various bacteria having adaptations which confer upon them survivability when exposed to spacial conditions as opposed to the archaea, may be explainable by known conditions in Earth's past.
To space and back during the LHB (Wells, et al., 2003).
Natural fission reactors (Davis et al., 2014) representing a “critical event” (Gauthier-Lafaye et al., 1996) possible formation of the Moon by a nuclear explosion at Earth's core-mantle boundary (CMB) (de Meijer et al., 2010).
Another possibility is that Earth and Mars were both seeded by a common source of biological life.
"What we need is a second sample of life. We have only one at present. It would be- it would a disappointment, as you say, to find life based on DNA, or at least life on Mars based on the same DNA code. [You can] just about imagine DNA evolving twice, but you couldn't imagine the same, uh, four-letter code, um, uh, evolving twice." (Richard Dawkins to Neil Tyson, Dawkins & Tyson, 2016, 7:30-7:57 minutes in)
Since modern RNA can be used as a template to synthesize DNA, with the uracil in RNA matching the thymine in DNA, it is entirely possible that what Dawkins refers to as “the same four-letter code" in DNA could have evolved twice, so long as the two DNA codes were derived from a common RNA code. This could be said to be dodging the issue of how DNA evolved twice in the same way that (most) panspermia hypotheses dodge the issue of how life began. This therefore begs the question: How could the same four-letter RNA code have evolved twice? The most obvious solution is that the same four-letter RNA code couldn’t have evolved twice, but must have come from a common RNA-based ancestor. The independently-derived DNA codes could thus be compatible with one another so long as the RNA codes on Earth and Mars had not yet greatly diverged since their common ancestor. That is to say, if in the early Solar system there was RNA-based life on both Mars and Earth, and these lifeforms (or quasi-lifeforms) were still very closely related and compatible with one another, and DNA originated roughly in this time period, independently on both worlds, then the DNA on either planet very well may have been compatible with the other simply by virtue of having been synthesized by nearly identical RNA codes.
Furthermore, there is, as noted earlier evidence indicating that the common ancestor of the Archaea and the Bacteria possessed an RNA-based genome (Leipe & al., 1999) and only after divergence was DNA acquired separately in the two lineages, possibly from DNA viruses in which DNA first arose (Leipe & al., 1999; Forterre, 2002).
Regardless, whether DNA evolved once, on either Earth or Mars, or twice, separately in the ancestors of the Archaea and the Bacteria, the fact that Archaea and Bacteria can experience LGT with one another and presumably would have been able to do so far more easily in the distant past, leaves us with the inescapable reality that there must have been a common origin for both of these groups. The Archaea and the Bacteria simply could not have evolved entirely independently ex nihilo.
In spite of the limitations of doing general and special counts, there remain a number of reasons to suspect independent origins. Not only were the Archaea likely the first domain of diversified life (Caetano-Anollés &al., 2014) on this planet, but the Archaea appear much more involved in the "baseline" biogeochemistry of the Earth. Additionally, while "[m]ost extremophiles are microorganisms (and a high proportion of these are archaea) [...]" and "Archaea is the main group to thrive in extreme environments," (Rampelotto, 2013), the Bacteria seem far more often tolerant (exapted?) to spacial extremes. The overall theme here is unmistakable: The apparent nativity of the Archaea is greater than that of the Bacteria, while the apparent foreignness of the Bacteria provides the most compelling reason to suspect panspermia.
The main problem for independent origins remains that the Archaea and Bacteria seem to share a common ancestor. There are a number of potential resolutions of this apparent paradox: (1) Life on Earth may have originated on Mars, but the Archaea got here first, followed by a "second wave" made up of Bacterial late-comers. (2) Both the Archaea and the Bacteria first appeared on Earth, but Bacteria spent part of their evolution (a) closer to Earth's surface prior to the establishment of a permanent atmosphere, or (b) off-world, either (i) in space, or (ii) on Mars, and in space during Mars-Earth transit. (3) Archaea were shaped mainly by evolving on Earth while Bacteria were shaped by evolving on Mars, but both ultimately descend from a common "third-party" source, which might be (a) another planet, or (b) no planet at all, but some other prebiotic environment, such as (i) a comet, (ii) an asteroid, (iii) a moon, (iv) a proto-planet, (v) a planetesimal, (vi) the dust cloud of a young proto-planetary disc such as that which our own Solar System accreted from, (vii) a proto-stellar nebula such as the Proto-Solar Nebula, (viii) a molecular cloud, (ix) an interraction between two or more of one of these sources, (x) an interraction or interractions between, or sequence of interractions between, some combination of two or more of these sources, or (xi) any combination of these.