Scum of the Earth: A Hypothesis for Prebiotic Multi-Compartmentalised Environments.
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Publication Date
2021-09-16Journal Title
Life (Basel)
ISSN
2075-1729
Publisher
MDPI AG
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Walton, C. R., & Shorttle, O. (2021). Scum of the Earth: A Hypothesis for Prebiotic Multi-Compartmentalised Environments.. Life (Basel) https://doi.org/10.3390/life11090976
Abstract
Compartmentalisation by bioenergetic membranes is a universal feature of life. The eventual compartmentalisation of prebiotic systems is therefore often argued to comprise a key step during the origin of life. Compartments may have been active participants in prebiotic chemistry, concentrating and spatially organising key reactants. However, most prebiotically plausible compartments are leaky or unstable, limiting their utility. Here, we develop a new hypothesis for an origin of life environment that capitalises upon, and mitigates the limitations of, prebiotic compartments: multi-compartmentalised layers in the near surface environment-a 'scum'. Scum-type environments benefit from many of the same ensemble-based advantages as microbial biofilms. In particular, scum layers mediate diffusion with the wider environments, favouring preservation and sharing of early informational molecules, along with the selective concentration of compatible prebiotic compounds. Biofilms are among the earliest traces imprinted by life in the rock record: we contend that prebiotic equivalents of these environments deserve future experimental investigation.
Keywords
early Earth, origin of life, prebiotic chemistry
Sponsorship
NERC (NE/L002507/1)
Natural Environment Research Council (2072939)
Identifiers
PMC8472051, 34575124
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/life11090976
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/330090
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