Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3067068024> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W3067068024 abstract "A plenty of theories on the origin of genetic codes have been proposed so far, yet all ignored the energetic driving force, its relation to the biochemical system, and most importantly, the missing “matchmaker” between proteins and nucleic acids. Here, a new hypothesis is proposed, according to which ATP is at the origin of the primordial genetic code by driving the coevolution of the genetic code with the pristine biochemical system. This hypothesis aims to show how the genetic code was produced e.g. by photochemical reactions in a protocell that derived from a lipid vesicle enclosing various life’s building blocks (e.g. nucleotides and peptides). At extant cell, ATP is the only energetic product of photosynthesis, and is at the energetic heart of the biochemical systems. ATP could energetically form and elongate chains of both polynucleotides and polypeptides, thus acting a “matchmaker” between these two bio-polymers and eventually mediating precellular biochemical innovation from energy transformation to informatization. ATP was not the only one that could drive the formation of polynucleotides and polypeptides, but favored by precellular selection. The protocell innovated a photosynthesis system to produce ATP efficiently and regularly with the aids of proteins and RNA/DNA. The completion of permanently recording the genetic information by DNA marked the dawn of cellular life operated by Darwinian evolution. The ATP hypothesis assumes or supports the photochemical origin of life, shedding light on the origins of both photosynthetic and biochemical systems, which remains largely unknown thus far. Based on ATP hypothesis, virus (like the new coronavirus) could not be the earliest life on Earth, as it has neither biochemical systems nor lipid bilayer membrane that provided relatively isolated environment for the development of protobiochemical reactions, although it owns the genetic code of a cellular life. Virus could not be a bridge between life and non-life, but is an anti-life substance, as it depletes cellular material for its own replication, and then spreads by destroying the host cells. It can be imagined that if cellular life are completely wiped out by the virus, the complete destruction of life on Earth would be inevitable." @default.
- W3067068024 created "2020-08-24" @default.
- W3067068024 creator A5026658937 @default.
- W3067068024 date "2020-09-11" @default.
- W3067068024 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W3067068024 title "The ATP Hypothesis Discovers the Missing “Matchmaker” between Proteins and Nucleic Acids" @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1021008049 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1501906309 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1567661984 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1601056649 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1631896948 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1633944576 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1659671958 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1765868291 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1877959862 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1969293843 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1969600369 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1980410097 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1987308487 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1993835147 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1995143868 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1995538509 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W1995844766 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2005365684 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2006328364 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2009542365 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2010790220 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2018237310 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2020772746 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2022539688 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2027298209 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2030382296 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2035857856 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2037238732 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2038979884 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2042796152 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2046845848 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2048602141 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2050083284 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2050641111 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2055977764 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2057013391 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2057316561 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2062019095 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2078818612 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2084508909 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2087895317 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2091571793 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2093210315 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2093268134 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2096160166 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2097971843 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2098015235 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2105662163 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2137842448 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2140139413 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2141708266 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2142472646 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2147433439 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2154075834 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2156278460 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2164701497 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2171093931 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2220472391 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2270288486 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2318598351 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2402534373 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2502520873 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2626363321 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2764143098 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2801417289 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2804362484 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2810903539 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2885194735 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2903405370 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2905259221 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2949277473 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2960409905 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2969240103 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W2971959039 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W3000537095 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W3006997937 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W3007934451 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W3041019241 @default.
- W3067068024 cites W3103300703 @default.
- W3067068024 doi "https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202003.0419.v9" @default.
- W3067068024 hasPublicationYear "2020" @default.
- W3067068024 type Work @default.
- W3067068024 sameAs 3067068024 @default.
- W3067068024 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W3067068024 crossrefType "posted-content" @default.
- W3067068024 hasAuthorship W3067068024A5026658937 @default.
- W3067068024 hasBestOaLocation W30670680241 @default.
- W3067068024 hasConcept C104317684 @default.
- W3067068024 hasConcept C10853874 @default.
- W3067068024 hasConcept C111921641 @default.
- W3067068024 hasConcept C114032466 @default.
- W3067068024 hasConcept C12554922 @default.
- W3067068024 hasConcept C190161988 @default.
- W3067068024 hasConcept C24107716 @default.