origin of life Flashcards
miller-urey experiment
mixture of water and simple chemicals + electric pulses (“lightning”) form amino acids easily
ie. organic molecules formed from inorganic compounds
RNA hypothesis
RNA can store genetic info AND catalyse primitive chemical reactions
RNA based-life as a precursor to DNA based life
likely location where life began
deep sea hydrothermal vents
mineral rich temp gradient
cells harvest energy gradient (proton-motive force due to pH diff across membrane)
universal features of cells
the minimal self-reproducing unit (by templated polymerisation of DNA)
proteins as catalysts
enclosed in PM
require free energy
LUCA
last universal common ancestor
branches of the phylogenetic tree of life
bacteria and archaea split first
eucarya branch from archaea
Archaea vs bacteria key difference
archaea often survive in harsh environments
how does genome size link to replication time
larger genome, longer to replicate (for single celled organism, multi-celled more complex)
human cell 11-20hrs to replicate
most of DNA codes for:
sequences that positively/negatively regulate gene activity (eg. turning on or off in response to different things)
only a small part of DNA codes for proteins / RNA molecules
four events occurring in the generation of new genes
intragenic mutation: changes in DNA of existing gene (errors in replication)
gene duplication: identical set produced
segment shuffling: 2+ genes broken+rejoined –> hybrid gene
horizontal transfer: piece of DNA transferred from genome of one cell to another
define homolog, ortholog, paralog
homolog: genes related by descent
ortholog: genes in two separate species from the same ancestral gene, by speciation
paralog: related genes resulting from gene duplication within a single genome, can evolve to have different functions in the same organism
eukaryote vs prokaryote
eukaryote has a NUCLEUS
about 10x longer, 1000x volume
have cytoskeleton
prokaryotes have tough cell walls
define endosymbiosis
proposed origin of mitochondria
engulfing a bacterium into ancient eukaryotic cell precursor
evidence for endosymbiosis
most eukaryotes contain mitochondria
mit similar size to bacteria
own DNA / ribosomes
double membrane
evolution of mitochondria hypothesis
anaerobic eukaryotic cells
endosymbiotic relation w bacterium –> advantage in O2 rich environments