Krakauer David C, Sasaki Akira
Santa Fe Institute, 1399 Hyde Park Road, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2002 Dec 7;269(1508):2423-8. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2002.2127.
The origin of stable self-replicating molecules represents a fundamental obstacle to the origin of life. The low fidelity of primordial replicators places restrictions on the quantity of information encoded in a primitive nucleic acid alphabet. Further difficulties for the origin of life are the role of drift in small primordial populations, reducing the rate of fixation of superior replicators, and the hostile conditions increasing developmental noise. Thus, mutation, noise and drift are three different stochastic effects that are assumed to make the evolution of life improbable. Here we show, to the contrary, how noise present in hostile early environments can increase the probability of faithful replication, by amplifying selection in finite populations. Noise has negative consequences in infinite populations, whereas in finite populations, we observe a synergistic interaction among noise sources. Hence, two factors formerly considered inimical to the origin of life-developmental noise and drift in small populations-can in combination give rise to conditions favourable to robust replication.
稳定的自我复制分子的起源是生命起源的一个基本障碍。原始复制器的低保真度限制了原始核酸字母表中编码信息的数量。生命起源的进一步困难在于原始小群体中漂变的作用,它降低了优良复制器的固定率,以及恶劣条件增加了发育噪声。因此,突变、噪声和漂变是三种不同的随机效应,被认为会使生命的进化变得不太可能。相反,我们在此表明,早期恶劣环境中存在的噪声如何通过在有限群体中放大选择来增加忠实复制的概率。噪声在无限群体中有负面后果,而在有限群体中,我们观察到噪声源之间存在协同相互作用。因此,以前被认为不利于生命起源的两个因素——发育噪声和小群体中的漂变——相结合可以产生有利于稳健复制的条件。