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El origen de la vida (1938)

door A. I. Oparin

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This classic of biochemistry offered the first detailed exposition of the theory that living tissue was preceded upon Earth by a long and gradual evolution of nitrogen and carbon compounds. "Easily the most scholarly authority on the question...it will be a landmark for discussion for a long time to come." — New York Times.… (meer)
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I think I first heard about this book from my extraordinarily well-read friend in the CSIRO (Mick F.). And that was in about 1968....we must have been discussing the origin of life. And over the years as my interest in the subject has never really wavered, I have heard more about Oparin's book. Well finally I have gotten around to reading it. It is now close to 100 years since it was first written (in Russian in 1936-7) and chemistry has moved on mightily since then. Oparin's book was written 20 years before the Watson Crick model of DNA was produced, so he was struggling with a lot of rather primitive chemistry. (Though I was actually surprised about what the chemists did know at that stage and it reminded me to never ignore the wisdom of earlier years. My son has just done a literature review for a science paper and made one of his exclusion criteria, "any paper over ten years old". Clearly, you are going to miss a lot of good stuff by doing this...and the assumption is that all the old findings are swept up in the new. But I don't think this is correct). Anyway, Opanrin makes some good points. In this review, to try and hit the main points of his story, it's hard to go past the last chapter which is really a summary of the whole book....and very well done. He initially starts with some cosmology and the origin of the elements and particularly the way that carbon is held in the sun as paired molecules ...or larger and on the earth as carbides.
He suggests an evolution on the cooling earth of a great variety of the simpler hydrocarbons (alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, organic acids etc.) through the oxidation by the oxygen component of water. These reacted with ammonia which appeared at that time and thus amides, amines and other nitrogenous derivatives.
He is at pains to rule out the spontaneous development of life and also makes the point that any complex organic molecules that might have developed after initial life had formed, would be instantly devoured by that life. Hence virtually impossible to replicate that situation today.
I was impressed that, with the knowledge of chemistry available at the time, that Oparin was able to put together a reasonable sort of story. I also learned that If some solutions were simply left that more complex chemicals might emerge: formaldehyde plus chalk gives some sugars; the ethyl ester of glycol ....allowed to stand by a window....produced slimy strands with several properties like proteins.....it was a polypeptide. He also emphasised something that I should have known (but didn't really): that all transformations of organic matter within the living cell are based on three principal reaction types:
1. Condensation (lengthening of the carbon chain and the reverse ...splitting the chain between two adjacent carbon atoms).
2.Polymerisation (the union of two organic molecules through an atom of oxygen or nitrogen.....and hydrolysis..the reverse process of splitting up such unions) and
3. Oxidation ( with the inevitable reverse process of reduction).
And water plays a major role in all these reactions...as do catalysts.
Oparin makes a lot of the formation of gels and sols and what he call coacervates...kind of like the situation where hyrophyllic and hydrophobic molecules line themselves up in a regular formation. (Today this is seen as the essence of creating a membrane..though Oparin doesn't seem to consider this).
Of course, Oparin has no concept of DNA at this time and seems to focus exclusively on the evolutionary development of organic molecules. He does make the interesting point that most processes are messy and involve mixtures of various sorts and mixtures will usually give different results to the pure molecules in test tubes, He also makes an interesting point about the energy released from three processes from 1 gm of sugar: From respiration ..674 calories; from Alcoholic fermentation...28 calories and from lactic acid formation 18 calories . (And with the lactic acid process it's not unusual for other products to be formed with the lactic acid). He suggests that alcohol and lactic acid are the more primitive mechanisms and probably evolved first. He also suggests that the processes of lactic acid and alcohol fermentation are outgrowths of the (rather messy and complicated) butyric acid fermentation ....and they represent advanced types of fermentation which have been passed on to the more highly evolved processes.
He also insists that organisms did not get their start from metabolising carbon dioxide. That came much later ...after various organic molecules developed on the earth.
It was also interesting to me to note that Oparin mentions the theory of symbiogenesis (quoting Kozo-Poljanski) with a cell nucleus consisting of the residues of a primitive living unit. I think Lynn Margulis is generally given credit for this concept ....though she wasn't born until 1938.
All in all, an interesting book. Obviously very dated but fascinating for ideas that are introduced and also fascinating for the chemistry that I was unaware of. I give it 4 stars. ( )
  booktsunami | Jul 31, 2021 |
It's important to understand the historical perspective when trying to understand the current one. This one will get you there. ( )
  ndpmcIntosh | Mar 21, 2016 |
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» Andere auteurs toevoegen (1 mogelijk)

AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
A. I. Oparinprimaire auteuralle editiesberekend
Morgulis, SergiusVertalerSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd
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Wikipedia in het Engels (2)

This classic of biochemistry offered the first detailed exposition of the theory that living tissue was preceded upon Earth by a long and gradual evolution of nitrogen and carbon compounds. "Easily the most scholarly authority on the question...it will be a landmark for discussion for a long time to come." — New York Times.

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