Abstract

Terrestrial life appeared on our planet within a time window of [4.4–3.5] billion years ago. During that time, it is suggested that the first proto-cellular forms developed in the surrounding of deep-sea hydrothermal vents, oceanic crust fractures that are still present nowadays. However, these environments are characterized by extreme temperature and pressure conditions that question the early membrane compartment’s capability to endure a stable structural state. Recent studies proposed an adaptive strategy employed by present-day extremophiles: the use of apolar molecules as structural membrane components in order to tune the bilayer dynamic response when needed. Here we extend this hypothesis on early life protomembrane models, using linear and branched alkanes as apolar stabilizing molecules of prebiotic relevance. The structural ordering and chain dynamics of these systems have been investigated as a function of temperature and pressure. We found that both types of alkanes studied, even the simplest linear ones, impact highly the multilamellar vesicle ordering and chain dynamics. Our data show that alkane-enriched membranes have a lower multilamellar vesicle swelling induced by the temperature increase and are significantly less affected by pressure variation as compared to alkane-free samples, suggesting a possible survival strategy for the first living forms.

Highlights

  • Terrestrial life appeared on our planet within a time window of [4.4–3.5] billion years ago

  • We found that the presence of the alkanes in the membrane has a highly significant effect on the equilibrium inter-membrane spacing of the multilamellar vesicles (MLVs), a sign of its likely role in dampening membrane fluctuations at all temperatures

  • The results of the dynamical study are in line with what we found for the structure modifications of the C10 mix with and without the eicosane

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Summary

Introduction

Terrestrial life appeared on our planet within a time window of [4.4–3.5] billion years ago. We observed a clear effect of both temperature and pressure in modulating the equilibrium MLV structure in the C10 mix sample, while both alkanes make the membrane less sensitive to pressure.

Results
Conclusion
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