Background: The coexistence of macromolecular replicators and thus the stability of presumed prebiotic replicator communities have been shown to critically depend on spatially constrained catalytic cooperation among RNA-like modular replicators. The necessary spatial constraints might have been supplied by mineral surfaces initially, preceding the more effective compartmentalization in membrane vesicles which must have been a later development of chemical evolution. Results: Using our surface-bound RNA world model - the Metabolic Replicator Model (MRM) platform - we show that the mobilities on the mineral substrate surface of both the macromolecular replicators and the small molecules of metabolites they produce catalytically are the key factors determining the stable persistence of an evolvable metabolic replicator community. Conclusion: The effects of replicator mobility and metabolite diffusion on different aspects of replicator coexistence in MRM are determined, including the maximum attainable size of the metabolic replicator system and its resistance to the invasion of parasitic replicators. We suggest a chemically plausible hypothetical scenario for the evolution of the first protocell starting from the surface-bound MRM system. © 2013 Könny and Czárán; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Könny, B., & Czárán, T. (2013). Spatial aspects of prebiotic replicator coexistence and community stability in a surface-bound RNA world model. BMC Evolutionary Biology, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-13-204
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.