origin of life - west virginia...

44
Origin of Life on Earth: The Biological Processes Geology 230, Fossils and Evolution

Upload: vuongnguyet

Post on 21-Aug-2018

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Origin of Life on Earth:

The Biological Processes

Geology 230,

Fossils and Evolution

Page 2: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

What is Life?

• Internal chemical activity providing

growth, repair, and generation of

energy.

• The ability to reproduce.

• The capacity to respond to outside

stimuli.

Page 3: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Components of Life

5 Principal components for all life:

Water

Carbohydrates: starches and sugars for

energy

Fats: for energy storage

Proteins: structural tissues

Nucleic acids: for reproduction

Page 4: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

6 Dominant Elements of Life

H, hydrogen

O, oxygen

C, carbon

N, nitrogen

P, phosphorous (in rocks)

S, sulfur

Page 5: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Combining Elements into

complex Organic compounds

• Miller’s 1953 experiment:

Combine gases of the early atmosphere

in a sealed system with no oxygen.

Heat the gases, add electrical sparks, cool

the mixture.

Amino acids formed after several days.

They are the building blocks of protein.

Page 6: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Combining Elements into

complex Organic compounds

• Miller combined CO2, NH3 (ammonia),

CH4 (methane), and H2

• Added electrical spark, plus cooling

• Formed amino acids, e.g. Serine

C3H7NO3

Page 7: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Miller’s apparatus for creating amino acids from

simple compounds in an anoxic atmosphere.

Page 8: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Miller’s experimental apparatus

-- note the black organics in the

spark chamber

Page 9: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living
Page 10: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Combining Elements into

complex Organic compounds

Several variations of Miller’s experiment

have been run. These experiments

have produced carbohydrates, fats,

simple proteins, and the building

blocks of nucleic acids: sugars,

phosphates, and nitrogenous bases

(ATCG).

Page 11: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

How did life begin?

No one has yet been able to create life in

the lab. However, scientists have had

only 50 years. Nature had 100s of

millions of years.

Primordial Soup with Julia Child

Page 12: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Experimental evidence: polymer

synthesis

proteinoids lipid spheres

Page 13: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

What was earliest life like?

• Certainly it was single celled.

• Single celled life today, 3 branches:

Archaea or Archaebacteria -prokaryotic cells

Bacteria or Eubacteria - prokaryotic cells

Eukarya - eukaryotic cells

Page 14: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

The 3 Primary

Branches of Life

Page 15: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living
Page 16: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Houston, we have a problem…

• In modern cells:

DNA directs protein

synthesis

AND

proteins catalyze DNA

replication

Which came first?

Page 17: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Prokaryotes vs. Eukaryotes

• Prokaryotes - simple, single-celled

organisms lacking a nucleus, organelles,

and sexual reproduction. Many are

anaerobic.

• Eukaryotes – single-celled (protists) or

multi-celled (plants and animals), have a

nucleus, organelles, sex, and are strictly

aerobic.

Page 18: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Prokaryotic cell vs.

Eukaryotic cell

Page 19: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Eukaryotic

Protozoans in

pond water

Page 20: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Archaea, the most primitive

forms of life

• Archaea use to be included with

bacteria, but geneticists have separated

them on the basis of their unique

genetic composition.

• Living archaea are all anaerobic and

they can tolerate extremes of heat and

chemistry.

Page 21: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Archaea and

Bacteria on the tip of

a pin. False

colorized. Both are

prokaryotes.

Page 22: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Archaea

• Retain evidence for life on early earth.

• Tolerate:

– boiling water

– poisonous gases: e.g., hydrogen

sulfide, carbon monoxide, etc.

– high doses of UV radiation

Page 23: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Hot springs at Yellowstone National Park.

Analog for the early earth?

Page 24: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae, give the hot

springs their distinctive color.

Page 25: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Archaea

Living archaea include:

– fermenters: eat sugars

– methane producers: energy from

CO2 and hydrogen

– chemoautotrophs: make their food

from chemicals in their environment

Page 26: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Where on earth did it happen?

• Darwin’s “warm little pond?”

concentrated “organic soup” (+)

no protection from UV radiation (-)

• Deep-sea volcanic vents?

protection from UV radiation (+)

heat destroys amino acids (-)

Page 27: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living
Page 28: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

The 5 Major Biochemical Steps

in the Evolution of Life

1. Fermentation – archaea

Sugar ethyl alcohol + 2 units of energy

2. Methane production – archaea

CO2 + 4H2 CH4 + 2 H20 + 1 unit of energy

Page 29: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

The 5 Major Biochemical Steps

in the Evolution of Life

3. Anaerobic photosynthesis – bacteria

H2S + CO2 sugar + water + sulphur

uses sunlight for energy

4. Aerobic photosynthesis - bacteria, 3.5 BY

H20 + CO2 sugar + O2

uses sunlight for energy

Page 30: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

The 5 Major Biochemical Steps

in the Evolution of Life

5. Aerobic respiration - bacteria and eukarya

Sugar + O2 H20 + CO2 + 36 units of energy

Page 31: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Anaerobic photosynthetic archaea in boiling mud

Page 32: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae, give the hot

springs their distinctive color.

Page 33: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living
Page 34: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living
Page 35: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Populations of

archaea and

bacteria in hot

springs runoff,

Yellowstone

National Park

Page 36: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Populations of archaea and bacteria in hot

springs runoff, Yellowstone National Park

Page 37: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Sampling Organisms from Hot Springs

Page 38: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living
Page 39: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Our Microbial

Origins

Page 40: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes

Page 41: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Cilia are used by free-living eukaryote cells

Page 42: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

White blood cells eat invaders the same way

free-living eukaryotes eat (amoebas)

Page 43: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Mitochondria were once free-living,

aerobic purple bacteria

Page 44: Origin of Life - West Virginia Universitypages.geo.wvu.edu/~kammer/g230/OriginsBiologicalProcesses.pdf · Origins. Sex cells resemble free-living eukaryotes. Cilia are used by free-living

Flagella are used by free-living eukaryotes

for locomotion