Interesting new nature article on the creation of self-replication molecules in the lab (abiogenesis)

by bohm 1 Replies latest jw friends

  • bohm
    bohm

    Full text here:

    http://www.nature.com/nchem/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nchem.2419.html

    abstract:

    How new species emerge in nature is still incompletely understood and difficult to study directly. Self-replicating molecules provide a simple model that allows us to capture the fundamental processes that occur in species formation. We have been able to monitor in real time and at a molecular level the diversification of self-replicating molecules into two distinct sets that compete for two different building blocks (‘food’) and so capture an important aspect of the process by which species may arise. The results show that the second replicator set is a descendant of the first and that both sets are kinetic products that oppose the thermodynamic preference of the system. The sets occupy related but complementary food niches. As diversification into sets takes place on the timescale of weeks and can be investigated at the molecular level, this work opens up new opportunities for experimentally investigating the process through which species arise both in real time and with enhanced detail.

    How new species emerge in nature is still incompletely understood and difcult to study directly. Self-replicating
    molecules provide a simple model that allows us to capture the fundamental processes that occur in species formation.
    We have been able to monitor in real time and at a molecular level the diversication of self-replicating molecules into
    two distinct sets that compete for two different building blocks (food) and so capture an important aspect of the process
    by which species may arise. The results show that the second replicator set is a descendant of the rst and that both sets
    are kinetic products that oppose the thermodynamic preference of the system. The sets occupy related but complementary
    food niches. As diversication into sets takes place on the timescale of weeks and can be investigated at the molecular
    level, this work opens up new opportunities for experimentally investigating the process through which species arise both
    in real time and with enhanced detail.
    How new species emerge in nature is still incompletely understood and difcult to study directly. Self-replicating
    molecules provide a simple model that allows us to capture the fundamental processes that occur in species formation.
    We have been able to monitor in real time and at a molecular level the diversication of self-replicating molecules into
    two distinct sets that compete for two different building blocks (food) and so capture an important aspect of the process
    by which species may arise. The results show that the second replicator set is a descendant of the rst and that both sets
    are kinetic products that oppose the thermodynamic preference of the system. The sets occupy related but complementary
    food niches. As diversication into sets takes place on the timescale of weeks and can be investigated at the molecular
    level, this work opens up new opportunities for experimentally investigating the process through which species arise both
    in real time and with enhanced detail.
  • cofty
    cofty

    Really interesting Bohm thank you.

    Am I right though in saying that this is more about the origin of species than abiogenesis?

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