Abstract

Iron-sulphur proteins are ancient and drive fundamental processes in cells, notably electron transfer and CO2 fixation. Iron-sulphur minerals with equivalent structures could have played a key role in the origin of life. However, the 'iron-sulphur world' hypothesis has had a mixed reception, with questions raised especially about the feasibility of a pyrites-pulled reverse Krebs cycle. Phylogenetics suggests that the earliest cells drove carbon and energy metabolism via the acetyl CoA pathway, which is also replete in Fe(Ni)S proteins. Deep differences between bacteria and archaea in this pathway obscure the ancestral state. These differences make sense if early cells depended on natural proton gradients in alkaline hydrothermal vents. If so, the acetyl CoA pathway diverged with the origins of active ion pumping, and ancestral CO2 fixation might have been equivalent to methanogens, which depend on a membrane-bound NiFe hydrogenase, energy converting hydrogenase. This uses the proton-motive force to reduce ferredoxin, thence CO2 . The mechanism suggests that pH could modulate reduction potential at the active site of the enzyme, facilitating the difficult reduction of CO2 by H2 . This mechanism could be generalised under abiotic conditions so that steep pH differences across semi-conducting Fe(Ni)S barriers drives not just the first steps of CO2 fixation to C1 and C2 organics such as CO, CH3 SH and CH3 COSH, but a series of similar carbonylation and hydrogenation reactions to form longer chain carboxylic acids such as pyruvate, oxaloacetate and α-ketoglutarate, as in the incomplete reverse Krebs cycle found in methanogens. We suggest that the closure of a complete reverse Krebs cycle, by regenerating acetyl CoA directly, displaced the acetyl CoA pathway from many modern groups. A later reliance on acetyl CoA and ATP eliminated the need for the proton-motive force to drive most steps of the reverse Krebs cycle. © 2017 IUBMB Life, 69(6):373-381, 2017.

Highlights

  • Iron–sulphur proteins are ancient and drive fundamental processes in cells, notably electron transfer and CO2 fixation

  • Autotrophic cells that live from this reaction alone must in principle use some form of coupling to lower the kinetic barrier to reaction, and Wa€chtersha€user proposed pyrites pulling as the coupling mechanism, in which the oxidation of FeS to pyrites (FeS2) is coupled to the reduction of CO2 by H2 [6]: FeS 1 H2S ! FeS21 H2 H21 CO2 ! HCOOH FeS 1 H2S 1 CO2 ! FeS21 HCOOH

  • Deep Differences Between Bacteria And Archaea. While these factors are all consistent with the primordial origins of the acetyl CoA pathway, there are deep differences in methyl synthesis between bacteria and archaea, which make it difficult to discern the evolution of the pathway [33,34,35]

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Summary

Journal Item

How to cite: Camprubi Casas, Eloi; Jordan, Sean; Vasiliadou, Rafaela and Lane, Nick (2017). Iron catalysis at the origin of life. International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Life, 69(6) pp. For guidance on citations see FAQs. c 2017 Eloi Camprubi; 2017 Sean F. Jordan; 2017 Rafaela Vasiliadou; 2017 Nick Lane https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Version: Version of Record Link(s) to article on publisher’s website: http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1002/iub.1632. Copyright and Moral Rights for the articles on this site are retained by the individual authors and/or other copyright owners. For more information on Open Research Online’s data policy on reuse of materials please consult the policies page

IUBMB LIFE
Problems With Primordial Metabolic Cycles
The Acetyl COA Pathway Is Ancient
Deep Differences Between Bacteria And Archaea
Alkaline Hydrothermal Vents
Analogous Reductions In The Incomplete Reverse Krebs Cycle
Collapse to the Complete Reverse Krebs Cycle
Conclusions
Full Text
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