Emergence of light-driven protometabolism on recruitment of a photocatalytic cofactor by a self-replicator

Nat Chem. 2020 Jul;12(7):603-607. doi: 10.1038/s41557-020-0494-4. Epub 2020 Jun 26.

Abstract

Establishing how life can emerge from inanimate matter is among the grand challenges of contemporary science. Chemical systems that capture life's essential characteristics-replication, metabolism and compartmentalization-offer a route to understanding this momentous process. The synthesis of life, whether based on canonical biomolecules or fully synthetic molecules, requires the functional integration of these three characteristics. Here we show how a system of fully synthetic self-replicating molecules, on recruiting a cofactor, acquires the ability to transform thiols in its environment into disulfide precursors from which the molecules can replicate. The binding of replicator and cofactor enhances the activity of the latter in oxidizing thiols into disulfides through photoredox catalysis and thereby accelerates replication by increasing the availability of the disulfide precursors. This positive feedback marks the emergence of light-driven protometabolism in a system that bears no resemblance to canonical biochemistry and constitutes a major step towards the highly challenging aim of creating a new and completely synthetic form of life.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Catalysis
  • Disulfides / chemistry*
  • Disulfides / radiation effects
  • Evolution, Chemical
  • Kinetics
  • Light*
  • Macrocyclic Compounds / chemistry*
  • Macrocyclic Compounds / radiation effects
  • Models, Chemical
  • Origin of Life
  • Oxidation-Reduction
  • Photochemistry
  • Porphyrins / chemistry
  • Rose Bengal / chemistry
  • Sulfhydryl Compounds / chemistry*
  • Sulfhydryl Compounds / radiation effects
  • Thermodynamics

Substances

  • Disulfides
  • Macrocyclic Compounds
  • Porphyrins
  • Sulfhydryl Compounds
  • tetraphenylporphyrin
  • Rose Bengal