학술논문

Metabolic homeostasis and growth in abiotic cells
Document Type
article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 120(19)
Subject
Citric Acid Cycle
Metabolic Networks and Pathways
Carbon Cycle
Homeostasis
Carbon
origin of metabolism
carbon-fixing cycles
alkaline hydrothermal vents
metabolic homeostasis
emergent properties
Language
Abstract
Metabolism constitutes the core chemistry of life. How it began on the early Earth and whether it had a cellular origin are still uncertain. A leading hypothesis for life's origins postulates that metabolism arose from geochemical CO2-fixing pathways, driven by inorganic catalysts and energy sources, long before enzymes or genes existed. The acetyl-CoA pathway and the reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle are considered ancient reaction networks that hold relics of early carbon-fixing pathways. Although transition metals can promote many steps of these pathways, whether they form a functional metabolic network in abiotic cells has not been demonstrated. Here, we formulate a nonenzymatic carbon-fixing network from these pathways and determine its functional feasibility in abiotic cells by imposing fundamental physicochemical constraints. Using first principles, we show that abiotic cells can sustain a steady carbon-fixing cycle that performs a systemic function over a relatively narrow range of conditions. Furthermore, we find that in all feasible steady states, the operation of the cycle elevates the osmotic pressure, leading to volume expansion. These results suggest that achieving homeostatic metabolic states under prebiotic conditions was possible, but challenging, and volume growth was a fundamental property of early metabolism.