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Primordial Krebs-cycle-like non-enzymatic reactions detected by mass spectrometry and nuclear magnetic resonance
| Content Provider | Semantic Scholar |
|---|---|
| Author | Caudy, Amy A. |
| Copyright Year | 2018 |
| Abstract | Metabolism is the process of nutrient uptake and conversion, : Background and executed by the metabolic network. Its evolutionary precursors most likely originated in non-enzymatic chemistry. To be exploitable in a Darwinian process that forms a metabolic pathway, non-enzymatic reactions need to form a chemical network that produces advantage-providing metabolites in a single, life compatible condition. In a hypothesis-generating, large-scale experiment, we recently screened iron and sulfur-rich solutions, and report that upon the formation of sulfate radicals, Krebs cycle intermediates establish metabolism-like non-enzymatic reactivity. A challenge to our results claims that the results obtained by liquid chromatography-selective reaction monitoring (LC-SRM) would not be reproducible by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ( H-NMR). This study compared the application of the : Methods two techniques to the relevant samples. We detect hundredto : Results thousand-fold differences in the specific limits of detection between LC-SRM and H-NMR to detect Krebs cycle intermediates. Further, the use of H-NMR was found generally problematic to characterize early metabolic reactions, as Archean-sediment typical iron concentrations cause paramagnetic signal suppression. Consequently, we selected non-enzymatic Krebs cycle reactions that fall within the determined technical limits. We confirm that these proceed unequivocally as evidenced by both LC-SRM and H-NMR. : Conclusions These results strengthen our previous conclusions about the existence of unifying reaction conditions that enables a series of co-occurring metabolism-like non-enzymatic Krebs cycle reactions. We further discuss why constraints applying to metabolism disentangle concentration from importance of any reaction intermediates, and why evolutionary precursors to metabolic pathways must have had much lower metabolite concentrations compared to modern metabolic networks. Research into the chemical origins of life will hence miss out on the chemistry relevant for metabolism if its focus is restricted solely to highly abundant and unreactive metabolites, including when it ignores life-compatibility of the reaction conditions as an essential constraint in enzyme evolution. 1,2* 3* 4 |
| File Format | PDF HTM / HTML |
| Alternate Webpage(s) | https://d212y8ha88k086.cloudfront.net/manuscripts/13097/a469b44d-2720-42e9-90fa-bb272620c10c_12103_-_Markus_Ralser.pdf?doi=10.12688/wellcomeopenres.12103.1 |
| Language | English |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |