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Energy-harnessing problem solving of primordial life: Modeling the emergence of catalytic host-nested parasite life cycles.

Bernard ConradChristian IseliMagnus Pirovino
Published in: PloS one (2023)
All life forms on earth ultimately descended from a primordial population dubbed the last universal common ancestor or LUCA via Darwinian evolution. Extant living systems share two salient functional features, a metabolism extracting and transforming energy required for survival, and an evolvable, informational polymer-the genome-conferring heredity. Genome replication invariably generates essential and ubiquitous genetic parasites. Here we model the energetic, replicative conditions of LUCA-like organisms and their parasites, as well as adaptive problem solving of host-parasite pairs. We show using an adapted Lotka-Volterra frame-work that three host-parasite pairs-individually a unit of a host and a parasite that is itself parasitized, therefore a nested parasite pair-are sufficient for robust and stable homeostasis, forming a life cycle. This nested parasitism model includes competition and habitat restriction. Its catalytic life cycle efficiently captures, channels and transforms energy, enabling dynamic host survival and adaptation. We propose a Malthusian fitness model for a quasispecies evolving through a host-nested parasite life cycle with two core features, rapid replacement of degenerate parasites and increasing evolutionary stability of host-nested parasite units from one to three pairs.
Keyphrases
  • life cycle
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • toxoplasma gondii
  • genome wide
  • trypanosoma cruzi
  • climate change
  • machine learning
  • body composition
  • germ cell
  • free survival
  • loop mediated isothermal amplification