The first cell : the mystery surrounding the beginning of life

Author(s)
    • Schreiber, Ulrich C.
    • Mayer, Christian
Bibliographic Information

The first cell : the mystery surrounding the beginning of life

Ulrich C. Schreiber, Christian Mayer

Springer, c2020

  • : pbk

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Includes references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book introduces a fresh perspective on the conditions for the genesis of the first cell. An important possible environment of the prehistoric Earth has long been overlooked as a host to the perfect biochemical conditions for this process. The first complexes of continental crust on the early Earth must have already contained systems of interconnected cracks and cavities, which were filled with volatiles like water, carbon dioxide and nitrogen. This book offers insights into how these conditions may have provided the ideal physical and chemical setting for the formation of protocells and early stages of life. The authors support their hypothesis with a number of astonishing findings from laboratory experiments focusing on a variety of organic compounds, and on the formation of key cellular ingredients and of primitive cell-like structures. Moreover, they discuss the principles of prebiotic evolution regarding the aspects of order and complexity. Guiding readers through various stages of hypotheses and re-created evolutionary processes, the book is enriched with personal remarks and experiences throughout, reflecting the authors' personal quest to solve the mystery surrounding the first cell.

Table of Contents

1 Introduction 1.1 The origin of life - why is the question so important for us? 1.2 What is life? 1.3 Who was LUCA? 1.4 The entry 2 Global requirements 2.1 First requirement: the planets and a sun 2.2 Second condition: the Earth - a material collection for the start 2.3 Third condition: water 2.4 Fourth requirement: a permanent atmosphere 2.5 How did it continue? 3 The narrower framework: The chemistry, physics and physical chemistry, without them it does not work 3.1 The chemical resources of life 3.2 Chemistry has its own laws 3.3 Catalysts accelerate a reaction substantially 3.4 Dilution - no reaction without concentration 3.5 Entropy and no end 3.6 Chirality - what is that? 4 Really helpful: a short outline of processes in biological cells 4.1 The problem of confinement 4.2 Information storage, without zeros and ones 4.3 How is the information used, which is stored in the cell? 5 Previous models 5.1 From ancient to modern science 5.2 The modern beginnings 5.3 The attempt of Harold C. Urey and Stanley L. Miller 5.4 The dam was broken 5.5 "Black Smoker" - a parallel world 5.6 A new discovery - the "White Smoker " 5.7 The search continued - warm ponds 5.8 Panspermia - space seeds 5.9 Further considerations 6 The RNA world: The start with a very special molecule? 6.1 RNA, a molecule with capabilities 6.2 Problems of the RNA world 7 The new model: hydrothermal systems in the early continental crust 7.1 The continental crust - fragile and disturbed 7.2 Supercritical gases - steam under pressure? 7.3 It does exist: proof from the nature 7.4 They are possible: experiments on the crustal model 8 A hypothetical approach 8.1 The search for the path 8.2 Phase I - formation and enrichment 8.3 Phase II - the selection process 8.4 Phase V (preferred) - a possible start of life 8.5 Phase VI - LUCA becomes visible 8.6 Phase III - bonds to the RNA world 8.7 Phase IV - the gap's closure 8.8 Can it be that way? 9 After LUCA: what happened next? 9.1 The triumphal procession begins 9.2 The contact of differently developed cells 9.3 What about the viruses?

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details
  • NCID
    BC11048040
  • ISBN
    • 9783030453831
  • Country Code
    sz
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Cham
  • Pages/Volumes
    xvii, 178 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
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