For understanding the origin of life, it is essential to explain the development of a compartmentalized structure, which undergoes growth and division, from a set of chemical reactions. In this study, a hypercycle with two chemicals that mutually catalyze each other is considered in order to show that the reproduction of a protocell with a growth-division process naturally occurs when the replication speed of one chemical is considerably slower than that of the other chemical, and molecules are crowded as a result of replication. It is observed that the protocell divides after a minority molecule is replicated at a slow synthesis rate, and thus, a synchrony between the reproduction of a cell and molecule replication is achieved. The robustness of such protocells against the invasion of parasitic molecules is also demonstrated. © 2010 The American Physical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Kamimura, A., & Kaneko, K. (2010). Reproduction of a protocell by replication of a minority molecule in a catalytic reaction network. Physical Review Letters, 105(26). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.268103
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