Cornish-Bowden Athel, Cárdenas María Luz
Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS, BIP, IMM, Marseille, France.
J Theor Biol. 2017 Dec 7;434:68-74. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2017.05.023. Epub 2017 May 20.
We see the last universal common ancestor of all living organisms, or LUCA, at the evolutionary separation of the Archaea from the Eubacteria, and before the symbiotic event believed to have led to the Eukarya. LUCA is often implicitly taken to be close to the origin of life, and sometimes this is even stated explicitly. However, LUCA already had the capacity to code for many proteins, and had some of the same bioenergetic capacities as modern organisms. An organism at the origin of life must have been vastly simpler, and this invites the question of how to define a living organism. Even if acceptance of the giant viruses as living organisms forces the definition of LUCA to be revised, it will not alter the essential point that LUCA should be regarded as a recent player in the evolution of life.
我们在古细菌与真细菌进化分离之时,以及在被认为导致真核生物出现的共生事件之前,看到了所有现存生物的最后一个共同祖先,即“露卡”(LUCA)。露卡常常被隐含地认为接近生命起源,有时甚至会被明确表述。然而,露卡已经具备编码多种蛋白质的能力,并且拥有一些与现代生物相同的生物能量能力。生命起源时的生物必定要简单得多,这就引出了如何定义生物的问题。即便将巨型病毒视为生物迫使露卡的定义需加以修订,也不会改变露卡应被视为生命进化中较晚出现的参与者这一要点。