https://reasonandscience.catsboard.com/t2110-what-might-be-a-protocells-minimal-requirement-of-parts
The simplest cells available to us for study have nothing "primitive" about them. They have a teleonomic apparatus so powerful that no vestiges of truly primitive structures are discernible.
J.Monod Chance and Necessity: An Essay on the Natural Philosophy of Modern Biology 1972
DIANA YATES (OCT 5, 2011) New evidence suggests that LUCA was a sophisticated organism after all, with a complex structure recognizable as a cell, researchers report. Their study appears in the journal Biology Direct. The study lends support to a hypothesis that LUCA may have been more complex even than the simplest organisms alive today, said James Whitfield, a professor of entomology at Illinois and a co-author on the study.
Yates, D. (2011, October 5). Last Universal Common Ancestor had a complex cellular structure. Illinois News. Link.
Gaetano-Anollés, G. (2011)The proteome of LUCA was recently reconstructed and was shown to embody the functions of a complex organism.
Evolution of vacuolar proton pyrophosphatase domains and volutin granules: clues into the early evolutionary origin of the acidocalcisome. Biology Direct, 6(50). Link.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111005112145.htm
Tiny genome: A somewhat vague term for a → genome, that is smaller than 300 kb, or smaller than the genome of Mycoplasma genitalium, the free-living organism with the smallest genome. Five obligate symbionts of insects have such tiny genomes: ‘Candidatus Sulcia muelleri’ (245,530 bp), ‘Candidatus Zinderia insecticola’(208,564 bp), ‘Candidatus Carsonella ruddii’ (159,662 bp), ‘Candidatus Hodgkinia cicadicola’(143,795 bp) and ‘Candidatus Tremblaya princeps’( 138,927 bp).
The genome sequence reveals that “Ca. Tremblaya princeps” cannot be considered an independent organism but that the consortium with its gammaproteobacterial symbiotic associate represents a new composite living being. 3
Chance of unguided random natural events producing just a minimal functional proteome, not considering all other essential things to get a first living self-replicating cell,is:
Let's suppose, we have a fully operational raw material, and the genetic language upon which to store genetic information. Only now, we can ask: Where did the information come from to make the first living organism? Various attempts have been made to lower the minimal information content to produce a fully working operational cell. Often, Mycoplasma is mentioned as a reference to the threshold of the living from the non-living. Mycoplasma genitalium is held as the smallest possible living self-replicating cell. It is, however, a pathogen, an endosymbiont that only lives and survives within the body or cells of another organism ( humans ). As such, it IMPORTS many nutrients from the host organism. The host provides most of the nutrients such bacteria require, hence the bacteria do not need the genes for producing such compounds themselves. As such, it does not require the same complexity of biosynthesis pathways to manufacturing all nutrients as a free-living bacterium.
The simplest free-living bacteria is Pelagibacter ubique. 13 It is known to be one of the smallest and simplest, self-replicating, and free-living cells. It has complete biosynthetic pathways for all 20 amino acids. These organisms get by with about 1,300 genes and 1,308,759 base pairs and code for 1,354 proteins. 14 That would be the size of a book with 400 pages, each page with 3000 characters. They survive without any dependence on other life forms. Incidentally, these are also the most “successful” organisms on Earth. They make up about 25% of all microbial cells. If a chain could link up, what is the probability that the code letters might by chance be in some order which would be a usable gene, usable somewhere—anywhere—in some potentially living thing? If we take a model size of 1,200,000 base pairs, the chance to get the sequence randomly would be 4^1,200,000 or 10^722,000. This probability is hard to imagine but an illustration may help.
Imagine covering the whole of the USA with small coins, edge to edge. Now imagine piling other coins on each of these millions of coins. Now imagine continuing to pile coins on each coin until reaching the moon about 400,000 km away! If you were told that within this vast mountain of coins there was one coin different to all the others. The statistical chance of finding that one coin is about 1 in 10^55.
The argument of the cell
1. At least 1300 proteins are required as building blocks for the simplest living cell to come into existence.
2. Proteins are highly complex structures.
3. The probability of random creation of complex proteins, the assemblage of the needed 1300 in one place in nature without any control is less than 10^700,000 or impossible.
4. If you leave the molecules required to make the four basic building blocks of life, they will just randomize, and become asphalts.
4. Eliminative inductions argue for the truth of a proposition by arguing that competitors to that proposition are false. The impossibility of chance indicates the necessity of an intelligent designer to explain the origin of life.
How Many Genes Can Make a Cell: The Minimal-Gene-Set Concept
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2227/
Several theoretical and experimental studies have endeavored to derive the minimal set of genes that are necessary and sufficient to sustain a functioning cell under ideal conditions, that is, in the presence of unlimited amounts of all essential nutrients and in the absence of any adverse factors, including competition. A comparison of the first two completed bacterial genomes, those of the parasites Haemophilus influenzae and Mycoplasma genitalium, produced a version of the minimal gene set consisting of ~250 genes.
Following irreducible processes and parts are required to keep cells alive, and illustrate mount improbable to get life a first go:
Reproduction. Reproduction is essential for the survival of all living things.
Metabolism. Enzymatic activity allows a cell to respond to changing environmental demands and regulate its metabolic pathways, both of which are essential to cell survival.
Nutrition. This is closely related to metabolism. Seal up a living organism in a box for long enough and in due course it will cease to function and eventually die. Nutrients are essential for life.
Complexity. All known forms of life are amazingly complex. Even single-celled organisms such as bacteria are veritable beehives of activity involving millions of components.
Organization. Maybe it is not complexity per se that is significant, but organized complexity.
Growth and development. Individual organisms grow and ecosystems tend to spread (if conditions are right).
Information content. In recent years scientists have stressed the analogy between living organisms and computers. Crucially, the information needed to replicate an organism is passed on in the genes from parent to offspring.
Hardware/software entanglement. All life of the sort found on Earth stems from a deal struck between two very different classes of molecules: nucleic acids and proteins.
Permanence and change. A further paradox of life concerns the strange conjunction of permanence and change.
Sensitivity. All organisms respond to stimuli— though not always to the same stimuli in the same ways.
Regulation. All organisms have regulatory mechanisms that coordinate internal processes.
Nature made at least three new types of inventions in assembling living cells from building blocks produced by prebiotic chemistry:
catalysis synchronized the necessary chemical reactions;
specificity put the building blocks together correctly; and
heritable blueprints – genetic coding – furnished sufficient continuity for complexity to grow.
The most dramatic of these inventions were all completed and probably overwritten before the first living cells appeared
http://serious-science.org/ancient-enzymes-reveal-the-dna-genesis-3234
Only self awareness and conscient intelligent beings can invent things.
Bhavesh H Patel: Common origins of RNA, protein and lipid precursors in a cyanosulfidic protometabolism 2015 Jul 8
A minimal cell can be thought of as comprising informational, compartment-forming and metabolic subsystems. To imagine the abiotic assembly of such an overall system, however, places great demands on hypothetical prebiotic chemistry. The perceived differences and incompatibilities between these subsystems have led to the widely held assumption that one or other subsystem must have preceded the others.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26154881/
The discussion on what is an ideal chassis—a natural, robust cell or a minimized version— is still open. (2015) There is a hierarchy of minimal cells depending on the chemical composition of the medium. 14 The smallest known organism (microorganism) is debatable 17 There isn’t a consensus over how small a free-living organism can be, and what the space optimization strategies may be for a cell at the lower size limit for life.
First Detailed Microscopy Evidence of Bacteria at the Lower Size Limit of Life
https://newscenter.lbl.gov/2015/02/27/ultra-small-bacteria/
Scientists have captured the first detailed microscopy images of ultra-small bacteria that are believed to be about as small as life can get. About 150 of these bacteria could fit inside an Escherichia coli cell. The cells are close to and in some cases smaller than several estimates for the lower size limit of life. This is the smallest a cell can be and still accommodate enough material to sustain life. The bacterial cells have densely packed spirals that are probably DNA, a very small number of ribosomes, hair-like appendages, and a stripped-down metabolism that likely requires them to rely on other bacteria for many of life’s necessities.
https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms7372#Sec19
So that is as well not our candidate for a putative minimal free-living cell.
A minimal (extant, non-primitive) cell has been defined as “a biological system that possesses only the necessary and sufficient attributes to be considered alive. Therefore, it must be able to maintain its own structures (homeostasis), self-reproduce, and evolve in a supportive, protected, and stable environment”. Thus, the challenge is to demarcate those “necessary and sufficient attributes” of life, and a functional approach appears adequate for that purpose. The functional elements of a living cell are (lipid) membranes, proteins, and RNA molecules, and the instructions for making these parts, which are encrypted in genes (i.e., DNA) whose information must be “read” by the rest of the molecular machinery. For this reason, a major challenge in biology during the last decades has been to define the minimal number of genes necessary to keep a minimal cell alive, what has been called a minimal genome. Most studies have focused on bacteria, due to their apparent simplicity and the amount of information that has already been gathered about them. 14
Learning from Nature to Define a Minimal Genome
In order to define a set of essential and sufficient genes to keep a bacterial cell alive, it is first necessary to define which are the essential functions that need to be fulfilled. To approach this point, scientists have looked for functions that have been preserved in natural living bacteria with the most reduced genomes, because they must retain all genes involved in informational functions plus a minimal metabolic network for cellular maintenance and reproduction in their given niche. To date, all known cases of reduced bacterial genomes are associated with specific lifestyles linked to stable environments: cosmopolitan oceanic free-living bacteria and obligate symbionts (either parasitic or mutualistic), the latter being the most affected by reductive genome evolution. In other words, natural small genomes have been observed in diverse situations with remarkable dissimilarities, including a dramatic difference in population sizes, from large marine bacterioplankton populations to small populations of endosymbiotic bacteria inside a eukaryotic cell 14
Examples of microorganisms with small genomes completely sequenced
Mycoplasma genitalium is held as the smallest possible living self-replicating cell, and as such, used as a reference of the smallest possible living cell. Mycoplasma is, however, a pathogen, an endosymbiont 13 that only lives and survives within the body or cells of another organism ( humans ). As such, it IMPORTS many nutrients from the host organism. The host provides most of the nutrients such bacteria require, hence the bacteria do not need the genes for producing such compounds themselves. 12 Endosymbionts can only survive inside their host cells as they rely on their host (and, in some cases on co-primary endosymbiotic partners) for metabolic and other functions. 14 As such, it does not require the same complexity of biosynthesis pathways to manufacturing these nutrients as a free-living bacterium.
Amino Acid Transport in Mycoplasma
The fact that the minute Mycoplasma cells lack many biosynthetic pathways and depend on the supply of many nutrients from the growth medium may indicate the presence of numerous transport systems in these organisms
https://jb.asm.org/content/jb/95/5/1685.full.pdf
This indicates, that the Last Universal Common Ancestor would have had to be much more complex. Amino Acids, for example, were no readily available on the early earth. For example, in the Miller Urey experiment, eight of the 20 amino acids were never produced. Neither in 1953 nor in the subsequent experiments.
How Many Genes Can Make a Cell: The Minimal-Gene-Set Concept
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2227/
(x) No biosynthetic pathways for amino acids, since we suppose that they can be provided by the environment.
My comment: This paper presupposes that amino acids could be provided by the environment. In prebiotic scenarios, such supposition is not justified. What can be inferred from this is, that the usual proposed minimal genome, proteome, and metabolome for a putative LUCA are incorrect, and a complete set of metabolic pathways should be incorporated.
As for the metabolic aspect, an obvious difficulty is that there is no one minimal gene set for life but many, depending on the environment. Among cells with reduced genomes, we find a continuum of metabolic modes, from organic matter-dependent heterotrophy to the minimally demanding autotrophy. 14
The translation machinery is, by far, the most complex part of a modern minimal cell, both in its biogenesis and its function. Therefore, it was not surprising that half of the previously classified as poorly characterized genes have been associated with the maturation of the translation apparatus.
Ribosome biogenesis is fundamental for cellular life, but surprisingly little is known about the underlying pathway. 15 The biosynthesis of ribosomes is, therefore, an essential process for all living organisms. A highly complex interaction of a multiplicity of non-ribosomal proteins and small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) facilitates ribosome formation. Prokaryotic ribosome synthesis is a complex, multistep process requiring the coordinated synthesis, cleavage, post-transcriptional modification and folding of ribosomal RNA (rRNA), and the translation, post-translational modification, folding and binding of approximately 50 ribosomal proteins (r-proteins). 16 Ribosome biogenesis is energetically costly, with the majority of cellular transcription and translational capacity dedicated to the production of new ribosomes. This process is both rapid, requiring ∼2 minutes for production of a single ribosome, and efficient, with the vast majority of assembly events resulting in mature, translationally active complexes. The assembly of ribosomes is tightly regulated in a growth-rate–dependent manner primarily at the level of rRNA synthesis
Network fragility increases with metabolic minimization.
Gene essentiality was determined in in silico knock-out experiments using Flux Balance Analysis (FBA) on metabolic models inferred from complete genomes, except for the minimal theoretical network, based on CMG (Gil et al., 2004), where Elementary Flux Mode analysis was used. From right to left, the data points correspond to E. coli (Belda et al., 2012), ancestral and extant S. glossinidius network (Belda et al., 2012), M. pneumoniae (Wodke et al., 2013), Blattabacterium (González-Domenech et al., 2012), B. aphidicola BAp (Thomas et al., 2009), B. aphidicola BCc (Belda et al., 2012), and the minimal theroretical metabolism (Gabaldón et al., 2007). CDS, protein coding sequences.
My comment: This indicates, that robustness and homeostasis of the metabolome is only reached when a certain size and complexity is achieved. Which is a contradiction in terms. It means, that it would have been extremely unlikely that the essential metabolic network would have grown step by step, from small to big, until getting a minimal functional size. Rather than integrate, the molecules would have disintegrated.
Surface area (SA) and volume (V) ratios in three selected species of different sizes: Escherichia coli, “Candidatus Pelagibacter ubique,” and Nanoarchaeum equitans. The microorganism with the smallest dimensions is “Ca. P. ubique”. The habitat of “Ca. P. ubique” is the open ocean (Oligotrophs occupy environments where the available nutrients offer little to sustain life. ) The total protein numbers in encoded by genomes of E. coli (NCBI Reference Sequence: NC_000913.3), “Ca. P. ubique” (GenBank: CP000084.1) and N. equitans (GenBank: AE017199.1) are given and related with the proteins with membrane-spanning domains. For prediction of transmembrane helices in proteins, above genomes were analyzed using TMMHMM 2.0 Server at http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/TMHMM/ (Krogh et al., 2001; Möller et al., 2001). ∗Dimensions and calculations of surface area and volume were obtained from Young (2006). ∗∗The diameter was obtained from Huber et al. (2002), the equations for the surface area (SA = 4πr2, where r is the radius) and volume
[ltr]V=43πr3[/ltr]
, where r is the radius) of a sphere.
Proteome Organization in a Genome-Reduced Bacterium
The bacterium Mycoplasma pneumoniae, a human pathogen, has a genome of reduced size and is one of the simplest organisms that can reproduce outside of host cells. As such, it represents an excellent model organism in which to attempt a systems-level understanding of its biological organization.
From proteomics to the cell. By a combination of pattern recognition and classification algorithms, the following TAP-identified complexes from M. pneumoniae, matching to existing electron microscopy and x-ray and tomogram structures
(A), were placed in a whole-cell tomogram
(B): the structural core of pyruvate dehydrogenase in blue (~23 nm), the ribosome in yellow (~26 nm), RNA polymerase in purple (~17 nm), and GroEL homomultimer in red (~20 nm). Cell dimensions are ~300 nm by 700 nm. The cell membrane is shown in light blue. The rod, a prominent structure filling the space of the tip region, is depicted in green. Its major structural elements are HMW2 (Mpn310) in the core and HMW3 (Mpn452) in the periphery, stabilizing the rod.The individual complexes (A) are not to scale, but they are shown to scale within the bacterial cell (B). 11
Higher level of proteome organization.
(A) The RNA polymerase–ribosome assembly. Core components are represented by circles, attachments by diamonds. The line attribute corresponds to socio-affinity indices: dashed lines, 0.5 to 0.86; plain lines, >0.86. Color code and shaded yellow circles around groups of proteins refer to individual complexes: RNA polymerase (pink), ribosome (purple), and translation elongation factor (green). The bottom graph shows that the ribosomal protein RpsD (23 kD) and the α subunit of the RNA polymerase, RpoA-TAP (57 kD), co-elute in high molecular weight fractions (MD range) during gel filtration chromatography.
(B) DNA topoisomerase (diameter ~ 12 nm) is a heterodimer in bacteria: ParE (ATPase and DNA binding domains) and ParC (cleavage and C-terminal domains). The interaction between ParE-DNA–binding and ParC–cleavage domains was modeled by using yeast topoisomerase II as a template [Protein Data Bank (PDB) code 2rgr], and ParE-ATPase and ParC–C-terminal domains were modeled separately on structures of gyrase homologs (PDB 1kij and 1suu). All four domains were fitted into the electron microscopy density. Gyrase (~12 nm) is similarly split in bacteria into GyrA/GyrB, which are paralogs of ParE/ParC, and was modeled and fitted by using PDB 1bjt as a template for the GyrB-DNA–binding and GyrA-cleavage domains interaction. (C) Protein multifunctionality in M. pneumoniae illustrated with the AARS complexes.
According to a peer-reviewed scientific paper published in Science magazine in 2016: Design and synthesis of a minimal bacterial genome, in their best approximation to a minimal cell, it has a 531,000-base pairs genome that encodes 473 gene products, being substantially smaller than M. genitalium (580 kbp), which has the smallest genome of any naturally occurring cell that has been grown in pure culture, having a genome that contains the core set of genes that are required for cellular life. That means, all its genes are essential and irreducible. It encodes for 438 proteins
https://sci-hub.ren/10.1126/science.aad6253
From the book: Lateral gene transfer in evolution, page 6
To control and process DNA as an information and storage apparatus, an organism REQUIRES AT LEAST a minimal set of DNA polymerase, DNA ligase, DNA helicase, DNA primase, DNA topoisomarase, and a DNA-dependent RNA polymerase.
A fairly complex genome similar to those of free-living prokaryotes, with a variety of functional capabilities including metabolic transformation, information processing, membrane/transport proteins and complex regulation, shared between the three domains of life, emerges as the most likely progenitor of life on Earth, with profound repercussions for planetary exploration and exobiology. The estimate of LUCA's gene content appears to be substantially higher than that proposed previously, with a typical number of over 1000 gene families, of which more than 90% are also functionally characterized.a fairly complex genome similar to those of free-living prokaryotes, with a variety of functional capabilities including metabolic transformation, information processing, membrane/transport proteins and complex regulation, shared between the three domains of life, emerges as the most likely progenitor of life on Earth.
http://sci-hub.ren/https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0923250805002676
How Structure Arose in the Primordial Soup
Primitive organisms began to split into the different branches that make up the tree of life. In between those two seminal events, some of the greatest innovations in existence emerged: the cell, the genetic code and an energy system to fuel it all. All three of these are essential to life as we know it, yet scientists know disappointingly little about how any of these remarkable biological innovations came about.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-structure-arose-in-the-primordial-soup/
How small can a genome get and still run a living organism?
12 October 2006
Researchers now say that a symbiotic bacterium calledCarsonella ruddii, which lives off sap-feeding insects, has taken the record for smallest genome with just 159,662 'letters' (or base pairs) of DNA and 182 protein-coding genes. At one-third the size of previously found 'minimal' organisms, it is smaller than researchers thought they would find.
https://www.nature.com/news/2006/061009/full/news061009-10.html
The physiology and habitat of the last universal common ancestor
SEPTEMBER 2016
Among 286,514 protein clusters, we identified 355 protein families (∼0.1%) that trace to LUCA by phylogenetic criteria. Because these proteins are not universally distributed, they can shed light on LUCA’s physiology. Their functions, properties and prosthetic groups depict LUCA as anaerobic, CO2-fixing, H2-dependent with a Wood–Ljungdahl pathway, N2-fixing and thermophilic. LUCA’s biochemistry was replete with FeS clusters and radical reaction mechanisms. Its cofactors reveal dependence upon transition metals, flavins, S-adenosyl methionine, coenzyme A, ferredoxin, molybdopterin, corrins and selenium. Its genetic code required nucleoside modifications and S-adenosyl methionine-dependent methylations
http://sci-hub.ren/10.1038/nmicrobiol.2016.116
For a nonliving system, questions about irreducible complexity are even more challenging for a totally natural non-design scenario, because natural selection — which is the main mechanism of Darwinian evolution — cannot exist until a system can reproduce. For an origin of life we can think about the minimal complexity that would be required for reproduction and other basic life-functions. Most scientists think this would require hundreds of biomolecular parts. And current science has no plausible theories to explain how the minimal complexity required for life (and the beginning of biological natural selection) could have been produced by natural process before the beginning of biological natural selection.
In order to make life, and specially multicellular complex life, the building blocks of life, cells, have to be made, which are the tiniest living entities. To build cells requires information and programming, complex protein manufacturing machines and assembly lines, energy, nutrient supply chains, quality control , waste bins, ability to adapt to the environment and to react to stimuli, ability of replicating, and housing ( the cell membrane ).
“The complexity of the simplest known type of cell is so great that it is impossible to accept that such an object could have been thrown together suddenly by some kind of freakish, vastly improbable, event. Such an occurrence would be indistinguishable from a miracle.”
― Michael Denton, Evolution: A Theory In Crisis
Determination of the Core of a Minimal Bacterial Gene Set
http://mmbr.asm.org/content/68/3/518.full.pdf
Based on the conjoint analysis of several computational and experimental strategies designed to define the minimal set of protein-coding genes that are necessary to maintain a functional bacterial cell, we propose a minimal gene set composed of 206 genes. Such a gene set will be able to sustain the main vital functions of a hypothetical simplest bacterial cell.
How Many Genes Can Make a Cell: The Minimal-Gene-Set Concept
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK2227/
Several theoretical and experimental studies have endeavored to derive the minimal set of genes that are necessary and sufficient to sustain a functioning cell under ideal conditions, that is, in the presence of unlimited amounts of all essential nutrients and in the absence of any adverse factors, including competition. A comparison of the first two completed bacterial genomes, those of the parasites Haemophilus influenzae and Mycoplasma genitalium, produced a version of the minimal gene set consisting of ~250 genes.
Quinones
Important components of the chemiosmotic energy-converting mechanisms are the lipophilic quinones that can diffuse in the lipid bilayer and connect the redox enzymes. Menaquinones are widely used in Prokaryotes in general and specifically in all the deep branching prokaryotic phyla (Schoepp-Cothenet et al., this issue) and consequently have been proposed to be present already in LUCA. 2
Molybdenum utilization is very likely an ancient trait present in LUCA because (i) it is utilized by almost all phyla of Archaea and Bacteria and (ii) a number of molybdo-enzymes, including the arsenite oxidase, the formate dehydrogenase, the nitrate reductase and the polysulfide reductase, have been predicted to have existed before the Archaea/Bacteria divergence.
Iron is essential to most life forms. To date, the only organisms that do not depend on iron belong to the Lactobacillus spp
A common feature of all life forms is their ability to maintain homeostasis in a given environment. Moreover, to accomplish cellular growth and division, a minimal cell would also require the ability to transform and assemble
its building blocks using the energy provided by the environment. It seems, therefore, that a minimal cell would require a minimal metabolism to fulfill both essential aspects. A first approximation to this core metabolism is provided by the analysis of the enzymatic functions encoded by the theoretically inferred minimal gene set from the abovementioned combined approach. Figure 16.1 (color plate 12)
provides representation of the metabolic network encoded by the theoretically inferred minimal gene set, which is thought to comprise the minimal set of metabolic reactions to sustain a bacterial cell under ideal nutrient supply conditions (i.e., glucose, fatty acids, amino acids, nucleobases, and vitamins). The comparison of this theoretically inferred minimal metabolism, in terms of metabolic capacities, with naturally reduced genomes reveals many parallels, since the procedure to determine this minimal set includes genes that are shared by most endosymbiotic bacteria. In the minimal gene set, the intermediary metabolism is mainly reduced to ATP synthesis by substrate-level phosphorylation during glycolysis and the nonoxidative pentose phosphate pathway, whereas amino acid biosynthesis is virtually absent. So it is with de novo biosynthesis of nucleotides, although the complete salvage pathways for most of them can be found. Lipid biosynthesis is limited to condensation of fatty acids with glycerol phosphate, and there are no pathways for biosynthesis of fatty acids. Altogether the minimal metabolic core seems devoted to the production of energy from glucose and the interconversion, rather than the net biosynthesis, of essential cellular building blocks, most of which would be readily provided by a rich environment. However, adding some complexity to this heterotrophic metabolism, one could envisage a hypothetical autotrophic minimal metabolism, like the one conjectured by Benner (1999).
Marcello Barbieri Code Biology A New Science of Life, page 26
Organic information is an irreducible entity, because it cannot be described by anything simpler than its sequence, and the same is true for organic meaning, which cannot be defined by anything simpler than its coding rules. Organic information and organic meaning, in short, belong to the same class of entities because they have the same defining characteristics: they both are objective but- not-measurable entities, and they both are fundamental entities because they cannot be reduced to anything simpler. They are the twin pillars of life because organic information comes from the copying process that produces genes, while organic meaning comes from the coding process that generates proteins.
A primitive cell like an E. coli bacteria - one of the simplest life forms in existence today -- is amazingly complex.
Proteins are essential building blocks of living cells; indeed, life can be viewed as resulting substantially from the chemical activity of proteins. Because of their importance, it is hardly surprising that ancestors for most proteins observed today were already present at the time of the 'last common ancestor', a primordial organism from which all life on Earth is descended. How did the first proteins arise? How can we bring a taxonomic order to the diversity of forms that evolved from them? These two questions are at the center of our scientific efforts, on which we bring to bear methods in bioinformatics, protein biochemistry and structural biology.
Based on the conjoint analysis of several computational and experimental strategies designed to define the minimal set of protein-coding genes that are necessary to maintain a functional bacterial cell, we propose a minimal gene set composed of 206 genes. Such a gene set will be able to sustain the main
vital functions of a hypothetical simplest bacterial cell with the following features.
(i) A virtually complete DNA replication machinery, composed of one nucleoid DNA binding protein, SSB, DNA helicase, primase, gyrase, polymerase III, and ligase. No initiation and recruiting proteins seem to be essential, and the DNA gyrase is the only topoisomerase included, which should perform
both replication and chromosome segregation functions.
(ii) A very rudimentary system for DNA repair, including only one endonuclease, one exonuclease, and a uracyl-DNA glycosylase.
(iii) A virtually complete transcriptional machinery, including the three subunits of the RNA polymerase, a factor, an RNA helicase, and four transcriptional factors (with elongation, antitermination, and transcription-translation coupling functions). Regulation of transcription does not appear to be essential in bacteria with reduced genomes, and therefore the minimal gene set does not contain any transcriptional regulators.
(iv) A nearly complete translational system. It contains the 20 aminoacyl-tRNA synthases, a methionyl-tRNA formyltransferase, five enzymes involved in tRNA maturation and modification, 50 ribosomal proteins (31 proteins for the large ribosomal subunit and 19 proteins for the small one), six proteins necessary for ribosome function and maturation (four of which are GTP binding proteins whose specific function is not well known), 12 translation factors, and 2 RNases involved in RNA degradation.
(v) Protein-processing, -folding, secretion, and degradation functions are performed by at least three proteins for posttranslational modification, two molecular chaperone systems (GroEL/S and DnaK/DnaJ/GrpE), six components of the translocase machinery (including the signal recognition particle, its receptor, the three essential components of the translocase channel, and a signal peptidase), one endopeptidase, and two proteases.
(vi) Cell division can be driven by FtsZ only, considering that, in a protected environment, the cell wall might not be necessary for cellular structure.
(vii) A basic substrate transport machinery cannot be clearly defined, based on our current knowledge. Although it appears that several cation and ABC transporters are always present in all analyzed bacteria, we have included in the minimal set only a PTS for glucose transport and a phosphate transporter. Further analysis should be performed to define a more complete set of transporters.
(viii) The energetic metabolism is based on ATP synthesis by glycolytic substrate-level phosphorylation.
(ix) The nonoxidative branch of the pentose pathway contains three enzymes (ribulose-phosphate epimerase, ribosephosphate isomerase, and transketolase), allowing the synthesis of pentoses (PRPP) from trioses or hexoses.
(x) No biosynthetic pathways for amino acids, since we suppose that they can be provided by the environment.
(xi) Lipid biosynthesis is reduced to the biosynthesis of phosphatidylethanolamine from the glycolytic intermediate dihydroxyacetone phosphate and activated fatty acids provided by the environment.
(xii) Nucleotide biosynthesis proceeds through the salvage pathways, from PRPP and the free bases adenine, guanine, and uracil, which are obtained from the environment.
(xiii) Most cofactor precursors (i.e., vitamins) are provided by the environment. Our proposed minimal cell performs only the steps for the syntheses of the strictly necessary coenzymes tetrahydrofolate, NAD, flavin aderine dinucleotide, thiamine diphosphate, pyridoxal phosphate, and CoA.
A brave estimate of the minimal components for the translational apparatus today comprises no more than 200 genes, of which more than 120 are associated with the translational apparatus, encoding about 40 genes for ribosomal
proteins, two rRNAs (omitting the 5S rRNA), 21 tRNAs, 20 synthetases, six factors and at least 20 tRNA modifying enzymes. In addition a minimum of 30 genes are needed for both the generation of household energy and the synthesis of at least some of the amino acids (note: since some of the amino acids were formed in the Stanley Miller type experiments mimicking the atmosphere and the physical environment of more than 3 billion years ago,8 they could be taken up from the primordial soup by the earliest cells and thus did not need to be synthesized).
Prebiotic Evolution and Astrobiology, page 28.
Johnson DE 2010, Programming of Life, p37&49.
life's original alphabet must have used a coding system at least as symbolically complex as the current codon alphabet. There has been no feasible natural explanation proposed to produce such an alphabet since chance or physicality cannot produce functional information or a coding system, let alone a system as complex as that in life"
Jack T. Trevors – Theoretical Biology & Medical Modelling, Vol. 2, 11 August 2005, page 8 1
“No man-made program comes close to the technical brilliance of even Mycoplasmal genetic algorithms. Mycoplasmas are the simplest known organism with the smallest known genome, to date. How was its genome and other living organisms’ genomes programmed?”
http://creation.com/origin-of-life
Donald E. Johnson (Ph.D: Computer & Information Science; Ph.D: Chemistry)
Abstract. The origin of life's biggest mystery is the origin of the genome which contains the information to cybernetically control all aspects of cellular life today. Without formal control, no life would exist. The genetics-first and metabolism-first models will be examined, each having characteristics that strain scientific credibility. Major physical science limitations and the formidable information science problems are examined. These problems usually result in over-simplifications in speculative scenarios. More serious are the peer-reviewed scientific null hypotheses that require falsification before any of the naturalistic scenarios can be considered as serious science. Assuming the problems can be resolved, the requirements for a minimal "genome" can be discussed in the areas of initial generation of programmed controls, replication of the genome and needed components that make it useful, regulation of "life's" processes, and evolvability. Life is an intersection of the physical sciences of chemistry and physics and the nonphysical formalism of information science. Each domain must be investigated using that domain's principles. Yet most scientists have been attempting to use physical science to explain life's nonphysical information domain, a practice that has no scientific justification.
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Last edited by Otangelo on Tue Oct 17, 2023 6:15 am; edited 123 times in total