Department of Chemistry, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA.
Acc Chem Res. 2012 Dec 18;45(12):2114-24. doi: 10.1021/ar200294y. Epub 2012 Feb 14.
How could the incredible complexity of modern cells evolve from something simple enough to have appeared in a primordial soup? This enduring question has sparked the interest of researchers since Darwin first considered his theory of natural selection. Organic molecules, even potentially functional molecules including peptides and nucleotides, can be produced abiotically. Amphiphiles such as surfactants and lipids display remarkable self-assembly processes including the spontaneous formation of vesicles resembling the membranes of living cells. Nonetheless, numerous questions remain. Given the presumably dilute concentrations of macromolecules in the prebiotic pools where the earliest cells are thought to have appeared, how could the necessary components become concentrated and encapsulated within a semipermeable membrane? What would drive the further structural complexity that is a hallmark of modern living systems? The interior of modern cells is subdivided into microcompartments such as the nucleoid of bacteria or the organelles of eukaryotic cells. Even within what at first appears to be a single compartment, for example, the cytoplasm or nucleus, chemical composition is often nonuniform, containing gradients, macromolecular assemblies, and/or liquid droplets. What might the internal structure of intermediate evolutionary forms have looked like? The nonideal aqueous solution chemistry of macromolecules offers an attractive possible answer to these questions. Aqueous polymer solutions will form multiple coexisting thermodynamic phases under a variety of readily accessible conditions. In this Account, we describe aqueous phase separation as a model system for biological compartmentalization in both early and modern cells, with an emphasis on systems that have been encapsulated within a lipid bilayer. We begin with an introduction to aqueous phase separation and discuss how this phenomenon can lead to microcompartmentalization and could facilitate biopolymer encapsulation by partitioning of solutes between the phases. We then describe primitive model cells based on phase separation inside lipid vesicles, which mimic several basic properties of biological cells: microcompartmentation, protein relocalization in response to stimulus, loss of symmetry, and asymmetric vesicle division. We observe these seemingly complex phenomena in the absence of genetic molecules, enzymes, or cellular machinery, and as a result these processes could provide clues to possible intermediates in the early evolution of cell-like assemblies.
现代细胞的难以置信的复杂性是如何从简单到足以在原始汤中出现的东西进化而来的?这个持久的问题自达尔文首次考虑自然选择理论以来,一直激发着研究人员的兴趣。即使是潜在的功能性分子,如肽和核苷酸,也可以非生物合成。两亲分子,如表面活性剂和脂质,表现出显著的自组装过程,包括自发形成类似于活细胞膜的囊泡。尽管如此,仍有许多问题悬而未决。鉴于最早出现的细胞被认为存在于原始汤中,假定大分子的浓度可能很低,那么必要的成分如何在半透膜内浓缩和封装?是什么推动了现代生命系统的标志性进一步结构复杂性?现代细胞的内部被细分为微区室,如细菌的拟核或真核细胞的细胞器。即使在最初看起来是一个单一隔室的情况下,例如细胞质或细胞核,化学组成通常也是不均匀的,包含梯度、大分子组装体和/或液滴。中间进化形式的内部结构可能是什么样子的?大分子的非理想水溶液化学为这些问题提供了一个有吸引力的可能答案。在各种易于获得的条件下,水溶液中的聚合物溶液将形成多个共存的热力学相。在本专题介绍中,我们将水溶液相分离描述为早期和现代细胞中生物区室化的模型系统,重点介绍已被脂质双层包裹的系统。我们首先介绍水溶液相分离,并讨论这种现象如何导致微区室化,并通过溶质在相之间的分配促进生物聚合物的封装。然后,我们描述基于脂质囊泡内相分离的原始模型细胞,这些细胞模拟了生物细胞的几个基本特性:微区室化、对刺激的蛋白质重定位、对称性丧失和不对称囊泡分裂。在没有遗传分子、酶或细胞机制的情况下,我们观察到这些看似复杂的现象,因此这些过程可以为细胞样组装的早期进化中的可能中间体提供线索。