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Dynamic lipid aptamers: non-polymeric chemical path to early life

Journal

CHEMICAL SOCIETY REVIEWS
Volume 50, Issue 21, Pages 11741-11746

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cs00633a

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Funding

  1. Minerva foundation [711473]
  2. Horizon 2020 EU [848011]

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Life may not solely rely on biopolymers like RNA and proteins, as lipid assemblies could play a crucial role in the origin of life. Further investigation is needed to determine if lipid assemblies have protein-like capacities for specific interactions. Experimental evidence suggests that lipid aggregates have dynamic surface configurations capable of specific molecular recognition.
A widespread dogma asserts that life could not have emerged without biopolymers - RNA and proteins. However, the widely acknowledged implausibility of a spontaneous appearance and proliferation of these complex molecules in primordial messy chemistry casts doubt on this scenario. A proposed alternative is Lipid-First, based on the evidence that lipid assemblies may spontaneously emerge in heterogeneous environments, and are shown to undergo growth and fission, and to portray autocatalytic self-copying. What seems undecided is whether lipid assemblies have protein-like capacities for stereospecific interactions, a sine qua non of life processes. This Viewpoint aims to alleviate such doubts, pointing to growing experimental evidence that lipid aggregates possess dynamic surface configurations capable of stereospecific molecular recognition. Such findings help support a possible key role of lipids in seeding life's origin.

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