The Origin of Life As We Know It
Jeffrey L. Bada (UCSD)
There are two fundamental requirements for life as we know it, liquid water and
organic polymers, such as nucleic acids and proteins. Water provides the medium for chemical
reactions and the polymers carry out the central biological functions of replication and catalysis.
During the accretionary phase of the Earth, high surface temperatures would have made the presence of
liquid water and an extensive organic carbon reservoir unlikely. As the Earth's surface cooled water
and simple organic compounds, derived from a variety of sources, would have begun to accumulate. This
set the stage for the process of chemical evolution to begin in which one of the central facets was
the synthesis of biologically important polymers, some of which had a variety of simple catalytic functions.
Increasingly complex macromolecules were produced and eventually molecules with the ability to catalyze their
own imperfect replication appeared. Thus began the processes of multiplication, heredity and variation, and
this marked the point of both the origin of life and evolution. Once simple self-replicating entities originated
they evolved first into the RNA World and eventually to the DNA/Protein World, which had all the attributes of
modern biochemistry. If the basic components water and organic polymers were, or are, present on other bodies
in our solar system and beyond, it is reasonable to assume that a similar series of steps that gave rise of life
on Earth could occur elsewhere.