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To: Jeffrey Epstein <jeevacation@gmail.com>
Subject: Buffington Post: Origin Of Life Ideas May Need Makeover
Date: Thu, 13 Dec 2012 11:55:49 +0000
Origin Of Life Ideas May Need Makeover
By: Tia Ghose, LiveScience Staff Writer
Published: 12/11/2012 07:08 PM EST on
LiveScience
Scientists trying to unravel the mystery of life's
origins have been looking at it the wrong way, a
new study argues.
Instead of trying to recreate the chemical building
blocks that gave rise to life 3.7 billion years ago,
scientists should use key differences in the way that
living creatures store and process information,
suggests new research detailed today (Dec. 11) in
the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.
"In trying to explain how life came to exist, people
have been fixated on a problem of chemistry, that
bringing life into being is like baking a cake, that
we have a set of ingredients and instructions to
follow," said study co-author Paul Davies, a
theoretical physicist and astrobiologist at Arizona
State University. "That approach is failing to
capture the essence of what life is about."
Living systems are uniquely characterized by two-
way flows of information, both from the bottom up
and the top down in terms of complexity, the
scientists write in the article. For instance, bottom
up would move from molecules to cells to whole
creatures, while top down would flow the opposite
way. The new perspective on life may reframe the
way that scientists try to uncover the origin of life
and hunt for strange new life forms on other planets.
[7 Theories on the Origin of Life]
"Right now, we're focusing on searching for life
that's identical to us, with the same molecules," said
Chris McKay, an astrobiologist at the NASA Ames
Research Center who was not involved in the study.
"Their approach potentially lays down a framework
that allows us to consider other classes of organic
molecules that could be the basis of life."
Chemical approach
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For decades, scientists have tried to recreate the
primordial events that gave rise to life on the planet.
In the famous Miller-Urey experiments reported in
1953, scientists electrically charged a primordial
soup of chemicals that mimicked the chemical
makeup of the planet's early oceans and found that
several simple amino acids, the most primitive
building blocks of life, formed as a result.
But since then, scientists aren't much further along
in understanding how simple amino acids could
have eventually morphed into simple, and then
complex, living beings.
Part of the problem is that there isn't really a good
definition of what life is, said Sara Walker, study
co-author and an astrobiologist at Arizona State
University.
"Usually the way we identify life on Earth is always
by having DNA present in the organism," Walker
told LiveScience. "We don't have a rigorous
mathematical way of identifying it."
Using a chemical definition of life — for instance,
requiring DNA — may limit the hunt for
extraterrestrial life, and it also may wrongly include
nonliving systems, for instance, a petri dish full of
self-replicating DNA, she said. [5 Bold Claims of
Alien Life]
Information processing
Walker's team created a simple mathematical model
to capture the transition from a nonliving to a
living-breathing being. According to the
researchers, all living things have one property that
inanimate objects don't: Information flows in two
directions.
For instance, when a person touches a hot stove, the
molecules in his hand sense heat, transmit that
information to the brain, and the brain then tells the
molecules of the hand to move. Such two-way
information flow governs the behavior of simple
and complex life forms alike, from the tiniest
bacteria to the giant humpback whale. By contrast,
if you put a cookie on the stove, the heat may burn
the cookie, but the treat won't do anything to
respond.
Another hallmark of living beings is that they have
different physical locations for storing and reading
information. For instance, the alphabet of letters in
DNA carries the instructions for life, but another
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part of the cell, called the ribosome, must translate
those instructions into actions inside the cell, Davies
told LiveScience.
(By this definition, computers, which store data on a
hard drive and read it off using a central processing
unit, would have the hallmarks of life, although that
doesn't mean they are alive per se, Walker said.)
The new model is still in its infancy and doesn't yet
point to new molecules that could have spawned life
on other planets. But it lays out the behavior needed
for a system needs to be considered living, Walker
said.
"This is a manifesto," said Davies. "It's a call to
arms and a way to say we've got to reorient and
redefine the subject and look at it in a different
way."
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• Extreme Life on Earth: 8 Bizarre Creatures
• 6 Most Likely Places to Find Alien Life
• Top Ten Unexplained Phenomena
Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork
company. All rights reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Typos, misspellings courtesy of iPhone word & thought substitution.
EFTA00701098
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