L
littlebird
Guest
How does non-life evolve into life ?
Correct. Evolution only starts after the appearance of the first life. Before that was the chemistry of abiogenesis.I wouldn’t say ‘evolve’ at that point.
Experiments to date have shown that amino acids, purines, pyrimidines and lipid bilayers can all form under prebiotic conditions on the early earth.It’s very complex and all the conditions have to be right. You need to have all the right precursor molecules to be present, possibly in a specific range of concentrations and relative to each other. An adequate amount of energy would also be required to allow the molecules to react with one another. Reactions to form DNA, which serve as templates to synthesise a variety of proteins that have different functions and reactions to provide energy for the organism to function and for further reactions.
You don’t need the DNA. RNA alone can act as information storage and as a catalyst: see ribozyme.All it would theoretically take is for some very basic cellular structures - namely a single molecule of DNA and a few ribosomes, to be encapsulated by a membrane. Boom, you’ve got a primitive cell.
And at one time, mitochondria were free-living prokaryotes before setting up a symbiosis with the first eukaryotes. They even have the remnants of their own original DNA on board still.I mean, the only difference between a prokaryote and eukaryote is that the more “advanced” eukaryote has an enclosed nucleus, and other organelles like a mitochondria. The prokaryote has everything just floating freely within the cell membrane.
That’s interesting. I knew that was generally the case for retroviruses and that RNA is more vulnerable to nucleophilic reactions than DNA.Almost all of them agree that DNA was not present at the very start, it appeared later.
You’re giving me flashbacks to my AP Biology testExperiments to date have shown that amino acids, purines, pyrimidines and lipid bilayers can all form under prebiotic conditions on the early earth.
There are various ideas as to what the first very simple life looked like. Almost all of them agree that DNA was not present at the very start, it appeared later. One of the possible ideas is the RNA World where RNA alone performed the functions of both DNA (information storage) and proteins/enzymes (catalyzing chemical reactions). There are other possible ideas as well, abiogenesis is still a work in progress.
Didn’t the Miller-Urey experiment get pretty close? I can’t recall exactly. In class we are taught that the Miller-Urey experiment pretty much explained abiogenesis, at least to an extent.No scientific ability to create life from non-life
You were lied to by atheist propaganda. Scientists these days don’t consider the Miller-Urey to be evidence that natural abiogenesis is possible. Besides a few useless amino acids, the experiments also produced great globs of highly toxic “black stuff” that is lethal to life.In class we are taught that the Miller-Urey experiment pretty much explained abiogenesis, at least to an extent.