One more step towards the origin of life.

Justo Miranda

ACCESS: Above Top Secret
Senior Member
Joined
2 December 2007
Messages
9,911
Reaction score
16,160
Website
www.amazon.com
If a single cell loves itself very much... (I know, not *EXACTLY* the very origin, but hey...)
 
I have leaned towards a mechanistic viewpoint---biology can take you only so far back--chemistry only so far forward.

In between? Vortices spinning off smokers--and micelles

A micelle is a "spherical cluster of amphiphilic molecules (like soap) that self-assemble in a liquid, forming a colloidal suspension."

I think cells came before DNA.

It doesn't take much energy for life to repair itself

"Their study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, reveals how the protein actively reshapes cell membranes—without requiring any external energy. The findings shed light on a fundamental biological repair process."
 
Last edited:
Since the Jyoti Singh et al paper came out of University College London, I'm a bit surprised that their Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment wasn't involved. Personally, I like UCL biochemist Nick Lane's emphasis on proton gradients - ie: no energy source, no life. Also keen on Lane's notion of pores formed within carbonate rocks around alkaline hydrothermal vents being able to provide an external 'structure' before self-supporting cell walls evolved.
 

Similar threads

Back
Top Bottom