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Sands of Time: First Cells and the Tree of Life Charley Kirlinkus
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Terms universal tree of life Bacteria Archaea Eucarya root of tree of life lateral (horizontal gene transfer Apex chert Cyanobacteria banded-iron formations stromatolites universal tree of life Bacteria Archaea Eucarya root of tree of life lateral (horizontal gene transfer Apex chert Cyanobacteria banded-iron formations stromatolites
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4 billion yrs. 3.5 billion
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Apex Chert Fossils of Western Australia 3.5 billion yrs.
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Living 1.5 billion Living 850 Ma 950 Ma J. W. Schopf Cradle of Life (1999) 2.1 billion Cyanobacteria Photosynthetic O 2 -producing Utilize CO2+H20
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Oldest known sedimentary rocks Banded iron formation, Isua, Greenland-- 3.7 billion years old Carbonaceous graphite particles From banded iron of Greenland 3.7 billion years old ratio 12 C to 13 C in graphite particles suggest they might be produced from living cells Presence of free O 2 In iron-oxide-rich bands
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Banded-Iron Formations (between 3.5 billion - 2 billion yrs J. W. Schopf Cradle of Life (1999)
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Besides fossils, which are extremely spotty in the fossil record, what other approach can we use to infer the earliest living cells?
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18S rRNA Woese (1996)
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J. W. Schopf Cradle of Life (1999)
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Using Gene Families to Root the Tree
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Lateral Transfer of Genes
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How Cellular Life Began 1. Chemical systems existed before they became packaged Into cells-- “primordial naked genes” able to self-reproduce. 2. Their chemical makeup caused these living molecules to cluster together into globules, like ancestors of walled cells. 3.First cells were powered by a simple form of metabolism that laid the foundation for later complicated metabolism. J. W. Schopf Cradle of Life (1999)
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Probably looked much like a bacterium Did the common ancestor use DNA to store information? Eucarya are vastly different Parsimony
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EARLY WORLD 3.5 billion yrs ago -- Apex Chert, Australia
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J. W. Schopf Cradle of Life (1999)
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Eukaryotic Algae 2 billion yrs
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Single-cell Eucarya fossils Earliest ~ 2 billion yrs.
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Origin of organelles: mitochondria and chloroplasts Origin of organelles: mitochondria and chloroplasts Proteobacteria Cyanoobacteria
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Horizontal Transfer J. W. Schopf Cradle of Life (1999)
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1. What was Earth’s environment like when life arose? 2. How is life defined, and how did it arise from non-life? 3. What were the characteristics of the very first cells? HARD QUESTIONS
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