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Prebiotic Protocell Membranes Retain Encapsulated Contents during Flocculation, and Phospholipids Preserve Encapsulation during Dehydration.

Zachary R CohenCaitlin E CornellDavid C CatlingRoy A BlackSarah L Keller
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2022)
The first cell membranes were likely composed of single-chain amphiphiles such as fatty acids. An open question is whether fatty acid membranes could have functioned within evaporative lakes on the early Earth, which have been hypothesized to concentrate prebiotic reactants. Evaporation also concentrates monovalent salts, which in turn cause fatty acid membrane vesicles to flocculate; significant loss of encapsulated contents during flocculation would have impeded early cell evolution. Here, we tested whether fatty acid vesicles retain encapsulated contents after flocculation and after drying. We found that vesicles composed of 2:1 decanoic acid:decanol encapsulate calcein dye throughout a process of flocculation in saturated salt solution and subsequent disaggregation of vesicles by dilution of the salt. However, 30 minutes of complete dehydration disrupted encapsulation by fatty acid vesicles. In contrast, phospholipid vesicles maintained encapsulation. Our results reveal a selective pressure for protocells to incorporate phospholipids: while fatty acid membranes can retain encapsulated contents during periods of dilute and saturating salt, phospholipids are necessary for encapsulation during dry periods. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that evaporative lakes were productive sites for prebiotic chemistry and the origin of cells.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • single cell
  • magnetic resonance
  • cell cycle arrest
  • computed tomography
  • mass spectrometry
  • bone marrow
  • genome wide
  • high resolution
  • liquid chromatography