Early bioenergetic evolution

Author:

Sousa Filipa L.1,Thiergart Thorsten1,Landan Giddy2,Nelson-Sathi Shijulal1,Pereira Inês A. C.3,Allen John F.45,Lane Nick5,Martin William F.1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Molecular Evolution, University of Düsseldorf, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany

2. Institute of Genomic Microbiology, University of Düsseldorf, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany

3. Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Oeiras, Portugal

4. School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Queen Mary, University of London, London, UK

5. Research Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Gower Street, London, UK

Abstract

Life is the harnessing of chemical energy in such a way that the energy-harnessing device makes a copy of itself. This paper outlines an energetically feasible path from a particular inorganic setting for the origin of life to the first free-living cells. The sources of energy available to early organic synthesis, early evolving systems and early cells stand in the foreground, as do the possible mechanisms of their conversion into harnessable chemical energy for synthetic reactions. With regard to the possible temporal sequence of events, we focus on: (i) alkaline hydrothermal vents as the far-from-equilibrium setting, (ii) the Wood–Ljungdahl (acetyl-CoA) pathway as the route that could have underpinned carbon assimilation for these processes, (iii) biochemical divergence, within the naturally formed inorganic compartments at a hydrothermal mound, of geochemically confined replicating entities with a complexity below that of free-living prokaryotes, and (iv) acetogenesis and methanogenesis as the ancestral forms of carbon and energy metabolism in the first free-living ancestors of the eubacteria and archaebacteria, respectively. In terms of the main evolutionary transitions in early bioenergetic evolution, we focus on: (i) thioester-dependent substrate-level phosphorylations, (ii) harnessing of naturally existing proton gradients at the vent–ocean interface via the ATP synthase, (iii) harnessing of Na + gradients generated by H + /Na + antiporters, (iv) flavin-based bifurcation-dependent gradient generation, and finally (v) quinone-based (and Q-cycle-dependent) proton gradient generation. Of those five transitions, the first four are posited to have taken place at the vent. Ultimately, all of these bioenergetic processes depend, even today, upon CO 2 reduction with low-potential ferredoxin (Fd), generated either chemosynthetically or photosynthetically, suggesting a reaction of the type ‘reduced iron → reduced carbon’ at the beginning of bioenergetic evolution.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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