Ciencias,UNAM

Historical development of origins of life

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dc.contributor.author Lazcano Araujo Reyes, Antonio Eusebio
dc.date.accessioned 20130312T14:38:33Z
dc.date.available 20130312T14:38:33Z
dc.date.issued 2010
dc.identifier.citation Lazcano, A. 2010. Historical development of origins of life. In David W. Deamer and Jack Szostak (eds). Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology: The Origins of Life (Cold Spring Harbor Press, Cold Spring Harbor), pp. 1-16 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 19366426
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11154/140309
dc.description.abstract Following the publication of the Origin of Species in 1859, many naturalists adopted the idea that living organisms were the historical outcome of gradual transformation of lifeless matter. These views soon merged with the developments of biochemistry and cell biology and led to proposals in which the origin of protoplasm was equated with the origin of life. The heterotrophic origin of life proposed by Oparin and Haldane in the 1920s was part of this tradition, which Oparin enriched by transforming the discussion of the emergence of the first cells into a workable multidisciplinary research program. On the other hand, the scientific trend toward understanding biological phenomena at the molecular level led authors like Troland, Muller, and others to propose that single molecules or viruses represented primordial living systems. The contrast between these opposing views on the origin of life represents not only contrasting views of the nature of life itself, but also major ideological discussions that reached a surprising intensity in the years following Stanley Miller's seminal result which showed the ease with which organic compounds of biochemical significance could be synthesized under putative primitive conditions. In fact, during the years following the Miller experiment, attempts to understand the origin of life were strongly influenced by research on DNA replication and protein biosynthesis, and, in sociopolitical terms, by the atmosphere created by Cold War tensions. The catalytic versatility of RNA molecules clearly merits a critical reappraisal of Muller's viewpoint. However, the discovery of ribozymes does not imply that autocatalytic nucleic acid molecules ready to be used as primordial genes were floating in the primitive oceans, or that the RNA world emerged completely assembled freom simple precursors present in the prebiotic soup. The evidence supporting the presence of a wide range of organic molecules on the primitive Earth, including membraneforming compounds, suggests that the evolution of membranebounded molecular systems preceded cellular life on our planet, and that life is the evolutionary outcome of a process, not of a single, fortuitous event. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.title Historical development of origins of life
dc.type Artículo de investigación en_US
dc.identifier.idprometeo 29
dc.identifier.doi 10.1101/cshperspect.a002089
dc.source.novolpages 116
dc.subject.wos Cell Biology
dc.description.index WoS: SCI, SSCI o AHCI
dc.relation.journal The Origins of Life (Cold Spring Harbor Press, Cold Spring Harbor)
dc.description.Departamento Departamento de Biología Evolutiva
dc.relation.Instadscription Facultad de Ciencias, UNAM

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