The Informational Substrate of Chemical Evolution: Implications for Abiogenesis

A key aspect of biological evolution is the capacity of living systems to process information, coded in deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), and used to direct how the cell works. The overall picture that emerges today from fields such as developmental, synthetic, and systems biology indicates that informat...

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Main Author: Andrés de la Escosura
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-08-01
Series:Life
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/9/3/66
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spelling doaj-1cf731bcbd3a4e8bb0f3ede4a55760e72020-11-25T02:20:26ZengMDPI AGLife2075-17292019-08-01936610.3390/life9030066life9030066The Informational Substrate of Chemical Evolution: Implications for AbiogenesisAndrés de la Escosura0Department of Organic Chemistry, Universidad Autónoma of Madrid, Cantoblanco Campus, 28049 Madrid, SpainA key aspect of biological evolution is the capacity of living systems to process information, coded in deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), and used to direct how the cell works. The overall picture that emerges today from fields such as developmental, synthetic, and systems biology indicates that information processing in cells occurs through a hierarchy of genes regulating the activity of other genes through complex metabolic networks. There is an implicit semiotic character in this way of dealing with information, based on functional molecules that act as signs to achieve self-regulation of the whole network. In contrast to cells, chemical systems are not thought of being able to process information, yet they must have preceded biological organisms, and evolved into them. Hence, there must have been prebiotic molecular assemblies that could somehow process information, in order to regulate their own constituent reactions and supramolecular organization processes. The purpose of this essay is then to reflect about the distinctive features of information in living and non-living matter, and on how the capacity of biological organisms for information processing was possibly rooted in a particular type of chemical systems (here referred to as autonomous chemical systems), which could self-sustain and reproduce through organizational closure of their molecular building blocks.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/9/3/66chemical evolutionprebiotic systems chemistryautonomous chemical systemsinformation processingchemosemiosis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrés de la Escosura
spellingShingle Andrés de la Escosura
The Informational Substrate of Chemical Evolution: Implications for Abiogenesis
Life
chemical evolution
prebiotic systems chemistry
autonomous chemical systems
information processing
chemosemiosis
author_facet Andrés de la Escosura
author_sort Andrés de la Escosura
title The Informational Substrate of Chemical Evolution: Implications for Abiogenesis
title_short The Informational Substrate of Chemical Evolution: Implications for Abiogenesis
title_full The Informational Substrate of Chemical Evolution: Implications for Abiogenesis
title_fullStr The Informational Substrate of Chemical Evolution: Implications for Abiogenesis
title_full_unstemmed The Informational Substrate of Chemical Evolution: Implications for Abiogenesis
title_sort informational substrate of chemical evolution: implications for abiogenesis
publisher MDPI AG
series Life
issn 2075-1729
publishDate 2019-08-01
description A key aspect of biological evolution is the capacity of living systems to process information, coded in deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), and used to direct how the cell works. The overall picture that emerges today from fields such as developmental, synthetic, and systems biology indicates that information processing in cells occurs through a hierarchy of genes regulating the activity of other genes through complex metabolic networks. There is an implicit semiotic character in this way of dealing with information, based on functional molecules that act as signs to achieve self-regulation of the whole network. In contrast to cells, chemical systems are not thought of being able to process information, yet they must have preceded biological organisms, and evolved into them. Hence, there must have been prebiotic molecular assemblies that could somehow process information, in order to regulate their own constituent reactions and supramolecular organization processes. The purpose of this essay is then to reflect about the distinctive features of information in living and non-living matter, and on how the capacity of biological organisms for information processing was possibly rooted in a particular type of chemical systems (here referred to as autonomous chemical systems), which could self-sustain and reproduce through organizational closure of their molecular building blocks.
topic chemical evolution
prebiotic systems chemistry
autonomous chemical systems
information processing
chemosemiosis
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/9/3/66
work_keys_str_mv AT andresdelaescosura theinformationalsubstrateofchemicalevolutionimplicationsforabiogenesis
AT andresdelaescosura informationalsubstrateofchemicalevolutionimplicationsforabiogenesis
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