The Prebiotic Emergence of Biological Evolution
ORAL
Abstract
The origin of life must have been preceded by Darwin-like evolutionary dynamics that could propagate it. How did that adaptive dynamics arise? And from what prebiotic molecules? Using evolutionary invasion analysis, we develop a universal framework for describing any origin story for evolutionary dynamics. We find that cooperative autocatalysts, i.e. autocatalysts whose per-unit reproductive rate grows as their population increases, have the special property of being able to cross a barrier that separates their initial degradation-dominated state from a growth-dominated state with evolutionary dynamics. For some models, this leap to persistent propagation is likely, not just a chance event. We apply this analysis to the Foldcat Mechanism, wherein peptides fold and help catalyze the elongation of each other. Foldcats are found to have cooperative autocatalysis and be capable of emergent evolutionary dynamics.
* We are grateful to the Laufer Center for Physical and Quantitative Biology at Stony Brook and to the John Templeton Foundation for financial support (grant ID 62564).
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Publication: C. D. Kocher and K. A. Dill, "The prebiotic emergence of biological evolution." Submitted to Phys. Rev. Research.
Presenters
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Charles D Kocher
Stony Brook University
Authors
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Charles D Kocher
Stony Brook University
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Ken A Dill
Stony Brook University (SUNY)