Evolution Alan Ward. Evolution Formation of the Earth Geochemical dating places the Earth ’ s age...
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Transcript of Evolution Alan Ward. Evolution Formation of the Earth Geochemical dating places the Earth ’ s age...
![Page 1: Evolution Alan Ward. Evolution Formation of the Earth Geochemical dating places the Earth ’ s age at 4.6 billion years The oldest rocks: SW Greenland.](https://reader036.fdocuments.in/reader036/viewer/2022062408/56649f165503460f94c2bb00/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Evolution
Alan Ward
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Evolution
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Formation of the EarthGeochemical dating places the Earth’s age at 4.6 billion years
The oldest rocks:
SW Greenland – Itsaq Gneiss Complex (3.86 billion years old)•Volcanic•Carbonate•Sedimentary
Western Australia – Warrawoona seriers; Towers formation; Pilbara supergroups
South Africa – Swaziland supergroup
Evolution
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Hadean
ArcheanOldest rocks from Isua Supercrustal Group
Oldest fossils
Formation of the earth
Stromatolites and cyanobacterria
first eukaryotesProterozoic
Explosion of phytoplanckton
Decline in phytoplanktonCambrian explosionPlants invade the landDinosaurs
Evolution
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EvolutionWays of studying the origin of life
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Essential characteristics of Life
Replication
Catalysis
Boundary layer
RNA World Early cellular life Modern cellular life
proteins take over as catalysts
DNA takes over replication
Evolution
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Self-replicating, catalytic RNA molecules
Ribozymes
Modern examples
Self-splicing mRNA
RNAse P
Ribosomes
50S ribosome
RNA
protein
RNA World Replication and Catalysis
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Lipoprotein vesicles
The cell – a boundary layer
Schrum et al., (2010) The origins of cellular life. Cold Spring Harbour Perspect Biol . Origins of Life Sunject Collection
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Energy generationEssential characteristics of Life
Proton Motive Force
or
Substrate level phosphorylation
FeS H2S + CO2 CH3SH FeS/NiS CH3SH + CO CH3COSCH3
CH3COSCH3 + Pi CH3CO-P + CH3SH
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Warm little pool
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RNA WorldThe ribosome is a ribozyme
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DNA evolution
• replication infidelities • effects of external and internal environmental
mutagens (UV, O2, mutagens, …)• DNA rearrangements• acquisition of genetic information
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Replication- Taq polymerase
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Bacterial genomes are sampling rather than accumulating sequences, counterbalancing gene acquisition with gene loss
Estimated rate of acquisition by lateral gene transfer 31 kb/Myr
Point mutations introduce 22 kb of variant DNA per Myr
Total acquired DNA since divergence of E. coli and S. enterica 100 Myr ago 3Mb
DNA different by LTG between E. coli and S. enterica 803 Kb
Lateral Gene Transfer
Escherichia coli (compared to Salmonella enterica)
Lawrence JG Ochman H (1997) Amelioration of Bacterial Genomes: Rates of Change and Exchange. J Mol Evol (1997) 44:383–397
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Lateral Gene Transfer
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MacFadden BJ (2005) Fossil Horses— Evidence for Evolution. Science 307, 1728 – 1730