http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993267

Chemistry guides evolution, claims theory 
 
  
09:30 20 January 03 
  
Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition 
  
That enduring metaphor for the randomness of evolution, a blind
watchmaker that works to no pattern or design, is being challenged by two
European chemists. They say that the watchmaker may have been blind, but
was guided and constrained by the changing chemistry of the environment,
with many inevitable results.

The metaphor of the blind watchmaker has been famously championed by
Richard Dawkins of the University of Oxford. But Robert Williams, also at
Oxford, and Jo�o Jos� R. Fra�sto da Silva of the Technical University of
Lisbon in Portugal say that evolution is not strictly random. They claim
Earth's chemistry has forced life to evolve along a predictable
progression from single-celled organisms to plants and animals.

Williams and da Silva take as their starting point the earliest life
forms that consisted of a single compartment, or vesicle, enclosing the
cytoplasm that produced polymers such as RNA, DNA and proteins. That
cytoplasm was partly dominated by the reducing chemistry of the primitive
oceans and atmosphere from which it formed, and has changed little since,
says Williams.

As these primitive cells, or prokaryotes, extracted hydrogen from water
they released oxygen, making the environment more oxidising. Ammonia
became nitrogen gas, metals were released from their sulphides, and
non-metal sulphides became sulphates. 

These changes forced the prokaryotes to adapt to use the oxidised
elements, and they evolved to harness energy by fixing nitrogen, using
oxygen, and developing photosynthesis. But these oxidising elements could
also damage the reducing chemistry in the cytoplasm. 

For protection, there was just one option: isolate the elements within
internal compartments, says Williams. And that gave rise to eukaryotes -
single-celled organisms with a nucleus and other organelles.


Quiet revolution 


Harold Morowitz, an expert on the thermodynamics of living systems at
George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, says these ideas are very
exciting. "It's part of a quiet paradigm revolution going on in biology,
in which the radical randomness of Darwinism is being replaced by a much
more scientific law-regulated emergence of life."

According to Williams and da Silva, eukaryotes also had to evolve a way
to communicate between their various organelles. The surrounding raw
materials dictated how this could be done. Calcium ions would have
routinely leaked into cells, precipitating DNA by binding to it. So cells
responded by pumping the ions out again. 

Eukaryotes evolved to use this calcium flow to send messages across
internal and external membranes. Similarly, sodium ions formerly expelled
as poisonous became the basis of communication in nerve cells.

Life continued to react to Earth's oxidised environment. Hydrogen
peroxide gave rise to lignin - an oxygen-rich polymer that is the chief
constituent of wood. And eukaryotes used copper oxidised from copper
sulphides to cross-link proteins such as collagen and chitin, which help
hold nerve and muscle cells in place. Such evolution of materials
suitable for multicellular structures paved the way for plants and
animals.


Chicken or egg 


Not everyone is convinced. Evolutionary biologist David Deamer of the
University of California, Santa Cruz, says the claim that evolution
followed an inevitable progression should be qualified: "The
inevitability depends on the origin of life and oxygenic photosynthesis."



He agrees that life arose in vesicles, but says that oxidative chemistry
cannot explain everything from prokaryotes to humans.

Williams admits their theory has limitations. For instance, he agrees
that Dawkins's argument is correct in that chance events drive the
development of species. But he does not believe random events drive
evolution overall. "Whatever life throws away will become the thing that
forces the next step in its development."

However, David Krakauer, an evolutionary theorist at the Santa Fe
Institute in New Mexico, says Williams and da Silva have simply listed
the chemical processes that coincided with each evolutionary transition,
which does not prove that the chemistry caused the transitions. But
Williams says that the environmental changes had to come first, because
they occur faster than changes in biological systems.

Journal reference: Journal of Theoretical Biology (vol 220, p 323)
 

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