论文标题
组成遗传的鲁棒性对益生元室的生长和分裂动态
Robustness of compositional heredity to the growth and division dynamics of prebiotic compartments
论文作者
论文摘要
生命起源以后的一个重要过渡是达尔文人口的第一个出现,即表现出差异繁殖,表型变异和表型特征的遗传的自我复制实体。我们可以想象的最简单的系统具有这些特性,它将由一个分隔的自催化反应系统组成,该系统表现出两个具有不同化学成分的生长状态。将化学成分识别为表型,这说明了两个特性。但是,尚不清楚这种化学系统在隔室生长和分裂时表现出遗传的必要条件。我们表明,对于一类经连续稀释的自催化化学系统,仅当稀释之间的时间间隔低于临界阈值以取决于催化反应的效率时,组成信息的遗传才会发生。此外,我们表明这些阈值对化学成分状态的遗传所需的特性提供了严格的界限,用于一般生长和分裂周期。我们的结果表明,在实验室中进行的连续稀释实验可用于测试给定的自催化化学系统是否可以表现出遗传性。最后,我们将结果应用于基于偶氮核酶的现实自催化系统,并提出了一种实验测试该系统是否可以表现出遗传的方案。
An important transition after the origin of life was the first emergence of a Darwinian population, self-reproducing entities exhibiting differential reproduction, phenotypic variation, and inheritance of phenotypic traits. The simplest system we can imagine to have these properties would consist of a compartmentalized autocatalytic reaction system that exhibits two growth states with different chemical compositions. Identifying the chemical composition as the phenotype, this accounts for two of the properties. However, it is not clear what are the necessary conditions for such a chemical system to exhibit inheritance of the compositional states upon growth and division of the compartment. We show that for a general class of autocatalytic chemical systems subject to serial dilution, the inheritance of compositional information only occurs when the time interval between dilutions is below a critical threshold that depends on the efficiency of the catalytic reactions. Further, we show that these thresholds provide rigorous bounds on the properties required for the inheritance of the chemical compositional state for general growth and division cycles. Our result suggests that a serial dilution experiment, which is much easier to set up in a laboratory, can be used to test whether a given autocatalytic chemical system can exhibit heredity. Lastly, we apply our results to a realistic autocatalytic system based on the Azoarcus ribozyme and suggest a protocol to experimentally test whether this system can exhibit heredity.