Login / Signup

A chemically fuelled self-replicator.

Sarah M MorrowIgnacio ColomerStephen P Fletcher
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
The continuous consumption of chemical energy powers biological systems so that they can operate functional supramolecular structures. A goal of modern science is to understand how simple chemical mixtures may transition from non-living components to truly emergent systems and the production of new lifelike materials and machines. In this work a replicator can be maintained out-of-equilibrium by the continuous consumption of chemical energy. The system is driven by the autocatalytic formation of a metastable surfactant whose breakdown products are converted back into building blocks by a chemical fuel. The consumption of fuel allows the high-energy replicators to persist at a steady state, much like a simple metabolic cycle. Thermodynamically-driven reactions effect a unidirectional substrate flux as the system tries to regain equilibrium. The metastable replicator persists at a higher concentration than achieved even transiently in a closed system, and its concentration is responsive to the rate of fuel supply.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • public health
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • high resolution
  • cancer therapy
  • drug delivery
  • mass spectrometry
  • water soluble
  • aqueous solution
  • structural basis