TY - CHAP
T1 - Experimental systems to explore life origin
T2 - Perspectives for understanding primitive mechanisms of cell division
AU - Adamala, Katarzyna
AU - Luisi, Pier Luigi
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Compartmentalization is a necessary element for the development of any cell cycle and the origin of speciation. Changes in shape and size of compartments might have been the first manifestation of development of so-called cell cycles. Cell growth and division, processes guided by biological reactions in modern cells, might have originated as purely physicochemical processes. Modern cells use enzymes to initiate and control all stages of cell cycle. Protocells, in the absence of advanced enzymatic machinery, might have needed to rely on physical properties of the membrane. As the division processes could not have been controlled by the cell's metabolism, the first protocells probably did not undergo regular cell cycles as we know it in cells of today. More likely, the division of protocells was triggered either by some inorganic catalyzing factor, such as porous surface, or protocells divided when the encapsulated contents reached some critical concentration.
AB - Compartmentalization is a necessary element for the development of any cell cycle and the origin of speciation. Changes in shape and size of compartments might have been the first manifestation of development of so-called cell cycles. Cell growth and division, processes guided by biological reactions in modern cells, might have originated as purely physicochemical processes. Modern cells use enzymes to initiate and control all stages of cell cycle. Protocells, in the absence of advanced enzymatic machinery, might have needed to rely on physical properties of the membrane. As the division processes could not have been controlled by the cell's metabolism, the first protocells probably did not undergo regular cell cycles as we know it in cells of today. More likely, the division of protocells was triggered either by some inorganic catalyzing factor, such as porous surface, or protocells divided when the encapsulated contents reached some critical concentration.
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U2 - 10.1007/978-3-642-19065-0_1
DO - 10.1007/978-3-642-19065-0_1
M3 - Chapter
C2 - 21630138
AN - SCOPUS:79959738368
SN - 9783642190643
T3 - Results and Problems in Cell Differentiation
SP - 1
EP - 9
BT - Cell Cycle in Development
A2 - Kubiak, Jacek
ER -