What Do You Know About Abiogenesis?

Started by Sleeper, July 18, 2013, 08:25:39 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Sleeper

Where is the theory currently? What all have they demonstrated and what is still unknown? Is it true that they're only missing the mechanism that allowed the first amino acids to form proteins?
Because LaPlace still holds sway.

Plu

Not an awful lot, actually. So if anyone has a good newb's intro to abio-genesis, I'd like to see it as well :)

But from what little I've read, they seem to have pieced most of it together.

AllPurposeAtheist

Everything I know about abiogenisis...











Well THAT was exhausting! :shock:
All hail my new signature!

Admit it. You're secretly green with envy.


Sal1981

Very little. An experiment or two, one which I remember is from the old Cosmos series where they had a huge controlled experiment that mimicked the conditions of the early earth, which produced the buildings blocks for life. I can't remember which episode it was.

Solitary

As far as I know they did make amino acids.

NASA scientists today announced the creation of amino acids, critical for life, in an environment that mimics deep space. The research will be published in the March 28 issue of the journal Nature.

In a laboratory at NASA Ames Research Center in California's Silicon Valley, the team of astrobiologists shone ultraviolet light on deep-space-like "ices," simulating conditions that are commonplace in interstellar space. Deep-space ice is common water ice laced with simple molecules. The team subsequently discovered amino acids, molecules present in, and essential for, life on Earth.

"This finding may shed light on the origin of life itself," said Dr. Max Bernstein, the first author and chemist at NASA Ames and the SETI Institute. "We found that amino acids can be made in the dense interstellar clouds where planetary systems and stars are made. Our experiments suggest that amino acids should be everywhere, wherever there are stars and planets."

The amino acids they detected (glycine, alanine and serine) are the basic parts of proteins from which all life is made. Proteins provide the structure for, and do all the work in, living things.

The amino acids produced in the NASA Ames lab are similar to those found previously in carbon-rich meteorites. Meteorites are pieces of asteroids or comets that have fallen to Earth. The chemical similarities may indicate that amino acids in meteorites were made in deep space, before the solar system formed, the scientists say.

"This finding suggests that Earth may have been seeded with amino acids from space in its earliest days," said Jason Dworkin of Ames and the SETI Institute. "And, since new stars and planets are formed within the same clouds in which new amino acids are being created, this increases the odds that life also evolved in places other than Earth."

"Taken in combination, these results suggest that interstellar chemistry may have played a significant part in supplying the Earth with some of the organic materials needed to jump-start life," Dworkin concluded.

To conduct their experiments, the research team simulated space-like conditions by freezing mixtures of molecules (such as wood alcohol and ammonia) that are abundant in interstellar clouds. They then exposed the resulting ice to ultraviolet light.

Previously, the team demonstrated that irradiating interstellar ice 'look-alikes' generated compounds called amphiphiles that can organize themselves to form membranes; and molecules called quinones that play important roles in the metabolism of all living organisms on Earth. The next step, they say, will be to tackle the issue of left- and right-handed amino acids. Both forms exist in space, but only the left-handed forms are used by life on Earth.

In addition to the principals, other scientists on the team included Drs. Louis Allamandola, George Cooper and Scott Sandford, all of Ames.Astrobiology is the multidisciplinary study of the origin, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe. NASA Ames Research Center is the location of the central offices of the NASA Astrobiology Institute and serves as the agency's lead center for astrobiology.

More detailed information about these findings is available at:

http://web99.arc.nasa.gov/~astrochem/aanature.html
Solitary
There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action.

Colanth

We know ways in which life COULD HAVE started.  We'll never know which way it DID start.  Only religion makes things up that can't be known.
Afflicting the comfortable for 70 years.
Science builds skyscrapers, faith flies planes into them.