LIFE
SHOULD NOT EXIST
An Open Letter to My
Colleagues
http://inference-review.com/article/an-open-letter-to-my-colleagues
James Tour is
a synthetic organic chemist at Rice University.
Article
LIFE
SHOULD NOT EXIST. This much we
know from chemistry. In contrast to the ubiquity of life on earth, the
lifelessness of other planets makes far better chemical sense. Synthetic
chemists know what it takes to build just one molecular compound. The compound
must be designed, the stereochemistry controlled. Yield optimization,
purification, and characterization are needed. An elaborate supply is required
to control synthesis from start to finish. None of this is easy. Few
researchers from other disciplines understand how molecules are synthesized.
Synthetic constraints must be taken into
account when considering the prebiotic preparation of the four classes of
compounds needed for life: the amino acids, the nucleotides, the saccharides,
and the lipids.1 The next level beyond synthesis
involves the components needed for the construction of nanosystems, which are
then assembled into a microsystem. Composed of many nanosystems, the cell is
nature’s fundamental microsystem. If the first cells were relatively simple,
they still required at least 256 protein-coding genes. This requirement is as
close to an absolute as we find in synthetic chemistry. A bacterium which
encodes 1,354 proteins contains one of the smallest genomes currently known.2
Consider the following Gedankenexperiment. Let us assume that all the molecules we think may be needed to
construct a cell are available in the requisite chemical and stereochemical
purities. Let us assume that these molecules can be separated and delivered to
a well-equipped laboratory. Let us also assume that the millions of articles
comprising the chemical and biochemical literature are readily accessible.
How might we build a cell?
It is not enough to have the chemicals on hand.
The relationship between the nucleotides and everything else must be specified
and, for this, coding information is essential. DNA and RNA are the primary
informational carriers of the cell. No matter the medium life might have
adopted at the very beginning, its information had to come from somewhere. A
string of nucleotides does not inherently encode anything. Let us assume that
DNA and RNA are available in whatever sequence we desire.
A cell, as defined in synthetic biological
terms, is a system that can maintain ion gradients, capture and process energy,
store information, and mutate.3 Can we build a cell from the raw
materials?4 We are synthetic
chemists, after all. If we cannot do it, nobody can. Lipids of an appropriate
length can spontaneously form lipid bilayers.
Molecular biology textbooks say as much. A
lipid bilayer bubble can contain water, and was a likely precursor to the
modern cell membrane.5Lipid assembly into a lipid bilayer membrane
can easily be provoked by agitation, or sonication in a lab.
Et voilà. The required lipid bilayer then forms. Right?
Not so fast. A few concerns should give us
pause:6
- Researchers
have identified thousands of different lipid structures in modern cell
membranes. These include glycerolipids, sphingolipids, sterols, prenols,
saccharolipids, and polyketides.7For this reason, selecting the bilayer
composition for our synthetic membrane target is far from straightforward.
When making synthetic vesicles—synthetic lipid bilayer membranes—mixtures
of lipids can, it should be noted, destabilize the system.
- Lipid
bilayers surround subcellular organelles, such as nuclei and mitochondria,
which are themselves nanosystems and microsystems. Each of these has their
own lipid composition.
- Lipids
have a non-symmetric distribution. The outer and inner faces of the lipid
bilayer are chemically inequivalent and cannot be interchanged.
The lipids are just the beginning.
Protein–lipid complexes are the required passive transport sites and active
pumps for the passage of ions and molecules through bilayer membranes, often
with high specificity. Some allow passage for substrates into the compartment,
and others their exit. The complexity increases further because all lipid
bilayers have vast numbers of polysaccharide (sugar) appendages, known as
glycans, and the sugars are no joke. These are important for nanosystem and
microsystem regulation. The inherent complexity of these saccharides is
daunting. Six repeat units of the saccharide D-pyranose can form more than one trillion different
hexasaccharides through branching (constitutional) and glycosidic
(stereochemical) diversity.8 Imagine the breadth of the library!
Polysaccharides are the most abundant organic
molecules on the planet. Their importance is reflected in the fact that they
are produced by and are essential to all natural systems. Every cell membrane
is coated with a complex array of polysaccharides, and all cell-to-cell
interactions take place through saccharide participation on the lipid bilayer
membrane surface. Eliminating any class of saccharides from an organism results
in its death, and every cellular dysfunction involves saccharides.
In a report entitled “Transforming
Glycoscience,” the US National Research Council recently noted that,
very
little is known about glycan diversification during evolution. Over three
billion years of evolution has failed to generate any kind of living cell that
is not covered with a dense and complex array of glycans.9
What is more, Vlatka Zoldoš, Tomislav Horvat,
and Gordan Lauc observed: “A peculiarity of glycan moieties of glycoproteins is
that they are not synthesized using a direct genetic template. Instead, they
result from the activity of several hundreds of enzymes organized in complex
pathways.”10
Saccharides are information-rich molecules.
Glycosyl transferases encode information into glycans and saccharide binding
proteins decode the information stored in the glycan structures. This process is
repeated according to polysaccharide branching and coupling patterns.11Saccharides encode and transfer information
long after their initial enzymatic construction.12 Polysaccharides carry more potential
information than any other macromolecule, including DNA and RNA. For this
reason, lipid-associated polysaccharides are proving enigmatic.13
Cellular and organelle bilayers, which were
once thought of as simple vesicles, are anything but. They are highly functional
gatekeepers. By virtue of their glycans, lipid bilayers become enormous banks
of stored, readable, and re-writable information. The sonication of a few
random lipids, polysaccharides, and proteins in a lab will not yield cellular
lipid bilayer membranes.
Mes frères, mes semblables, with these complexities in mind, how can we
build the microsystem of a simple cell? Would we be able to build even the
lipid bilayers? These diminutive cellular microsystems—which are, in turn,
composed of thousands of nanosystems—are beyond our comprehension. Yet we are
led to believe that 3.8 billion years ago the requisite compounds could be
found in some cave, or undersea vent, and somehow or other they assembled
themselves into the first cell.
Could time really have worked such magic?
Many of the molecular structures needed for
life are not thermodynamically favored by their syntheses. Formed by the
formose reaction, the saccharides undergo further condensation under the very
reaction conditions in which they form. The result is polymeric material, not
to mention its stereo-randomness at every stereogenic center, therefore doubly
useless.14 Time is the enemy. The reaction must
be stopped soon after the desired product is formed. If we run out of synthetic
intermediates in the laboratory, we have to go back to the beginning. Nature
does not keep a laboratory notebook. How does she bring up more material from
the rear?
If one understands the second law of
thermodynamics, according to some physicists,15 “You [can] start with a random clump
of atoms, and if you shine light on it for long enough, it should not be so
surprising that you get a plant.”16 The interactions of light with small
molecules is well understood. The experiment has been performed. The outcome is
known. Regardless of the wavelength of the light, no plant ever forms.
We synthetic chemists should state the obvious.
The appearance of life on earth is a mystery. We are nowhere near solving this
problem. The proposals offered thus far to explain life’s origin make no
scientific sense.
Beyond our planet, all the others that have
been probed are lifeless, a result in accord with our chemical expectations.
The laws of physics and chemistry’s Periodic Table are universal, suggesting
that life based upon amino acids, nucleotides, saccharides and lipids is an
anomaly. Life should not exist anywhere in our universe. Life should not even
exist on the surface of the earth.17
- See James
Tour, “Animadversions of a Synthetic Chemist,” Inference: International Review of Science 2,
no. 2 (2016); James Tour, “Two Experiments in Abiogenesis,” Inference: International Review of Science 2,
no. 3 (2016). ↩
- See Wikipedia, “Minimal Genome.” ↩
- David
Dearner, “A Giant Step Towards Artificial Life?” Trends in Biotechnology 23, no. 7 (2008):
336–38, doi:10.1016/j.tibtech.2005.05.008. ↩
- A small
towards this goal was achieved when a synthetic genome was inserted into a
host cell from which the original genome had been removed. The bilayer
membrane of the host cell and all of its cytoplasmic constituents had
already been created by natural biological processes. See Daniel Gibson et
al., “Creation of a Bacterial Cell Controlled by a
Chemically Synthesized Genome,” Science 329,
no. 5,987 (2010): 52–56, doi:10.1126/science.1190719. ↩
- Bruce
Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the
Cell, 4th ed. (New York: Garland Science, 2002). ↩
- See F.
Xabier Contreras et al., “Molecular Recognition of a Single Sphingolipid
Species by a Protein’s Transmembrane Domain,” Nature 481 (2012): 525–29,
doi:10.1038/nature10742; Yoshiyuki Norimatsu et al., “Protein–Phospholipid Interplay Revealed with Crystals
of a Calcium Pump,” Nature 545
(2017): 193–98, doi:10.1038/nature22357. ↩
- See Lipidomics Gateway, “LIPID MAPS Structure
Database.” ↩
- Roger
Laine, “Invited Commentary: A Calculation of All Possible
Oligosaccharide Isomers Both Branched and Linear Yields 1.05 × 1012
Structures for a Reducing Hexasaccharide: The Isomer Barrier to
Development of Single-Method Saccharide Sequencing or Synthesis Systems,” Glycobiology 4, no. 6 (1994): 759–67,
doi:10.1093/glycob/4.6.759. ↩
- National
Research Council, Transforming Glycoscience: A Roadmap for the Future(Washington,
DC: The National Academies Press, 2012), 72, doi:10.17226/13446. ↩
- Vlatka
Zoldoš, Tomislav Horvat and Gordan Lauc, “Glycomics Meets Genomics, Epigenomics and Other High
Throughput Omics for System Biology Studies,” Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 17, no. 1
(2012): 33–40, doi:10.1016/j.cbpa.2012.12.007. ↩
- Adapted
from Maureen Taylor and Kurt Drickamer, Introduction to Glycobiology(Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2006). ↩
- Gordan
Lauc, Aleksandar Vojta and Vlatka Zoldoš, “Epigenetic Regulation of Glycosylation Is the Quantum
Mechanics of Biology,” Biochimica et Biophysica
Acta – General Subjects 1,840, no. 1 (2014): 65–70,
doi:10.1016/j.bbagen.2013.08.017. ↩
- Claus-Wilhelm
von der Lieth, Thomas Luetteke, and Martin Frank, eds., Bioinformatics for Glycobiology and Glycomics: An
Introduction (Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009). ↩
- James
Tour, “Animadversions of a Synthetic Chemist,” Inference: International Review of Science 2,
no. 2 (2016). ↩
- See Jeremy
England, “Statistical Physics of Self-Replication,” Journal of Chemical Physics 139 (2013),
doi:10.1063/1.4818538; Paul Rosenberg, “God is on the Ropes: The Brilliant New Science That
Has Creationists and the Christian Right Terrified,” Salon, January 3, 2015. ↩
- Natalie
Wolchover, “A New Physics Theory of Life,” Quanta, January 22, 2014. ↩
- The author
wishes to thank Anthony Futerman of the Weizmann Institute and Russell
Carlson of the University of Georgia for information on lipids and
saccharides, respectively. ↩