Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Cyclophospholipids Increase Protocellular Stability to Metal Ions

43

Citations

40

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Model protocells have long been constructed with fatty acids, because these lipids are prebiotically plausible and can, at least theoretically, support a protocell life cycle. However, fatty acid protocells are stable only within a narrow range of pH and metal ion concentration. This instability is particularly problematic as the early Earth would have had a range of conditions, and extant life is completely reliant on metal ions for catalysis and the folding and activity of biological polymers. Here, prebiotically plausible monoacyl cyclophospholipids are shown to form robust vesicles that survive a broad range of pH and high concentrations of Mg<sup>2+</sup> , Ca<sup>2+</sup> , and Na<sup>+</sup> . Importantly, stability to Mg<sup>2+</sup> and Ca<sup>2+</sup> is improved by the presence of environmental concentrations of Na<sup>+</sup> . These results suggest that cyclophospholipids, or lipids with similar characteristics, may have played a central role during the emergence of Darwinian evolution.

References

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