The Origins of Cellular Life

Presenter: Jack Szostak
Published: July 2015
Age: 18-22 and upwards
Views: 1868 views
Tags: cell;nucleic;acid;genome;membrane
Type: Lectures
Source/institution: Lindau-Nobel
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The complexity of modern biological life has long made it difficult to understand how life could emerge spontaneously from the chemistry of the early earth. We are attempting to synthesize simple artificial cells in order to discover plausible pathways for the transition from chemistry to biology. Very primitive cells may have consisted of a self-replicating nucleic acid genome, encapsulated by a self-replicating cell membrane. A chemically rich environment that provided the building blocks of membranes, nucleic acids and peptides, along with sources of chemical energy, could have led to the emergence of replicating, evolving cells.