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Dehydration Enhances Prebiotic Lipid Remodeling and Vesicle Formation in Acidic Environments.

Luke H StellerMartin J Van KranendonkAnna Wang
Published in: ACS central science (2022)
The encapsulation of genetic polymers inside lipid bilayer compartments (vesicles) is a vital step in the emergence of cell-based life. However, even though acidic conditions promote many reactions required for generating prebiotic building blocks, prebiotically relevant lipids tend to form denser aggregates at acidic pHs rather than prebiotically useful vesicles that exhibit sufficient solute encapsulation. Here, we describe how dehydration/rehydration (DR) events, a prebiotically relevant physicochemical process known to promote polymerization reactions, can remodel dense lipid aggregates into thin-walled vesicles capable of RNA encapsulation even at acidic pHs. Furthermore, DR events appear to favor the encapsulation of RNA within thin-walled vesicles over more lipid-rich vesicles, thus conferring such vesicles a selective advantage.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • single cell
  • stem cells
  • genome wide
  • cell therapy
  • dna methylation
  • bone marrow