The origin of large molecules in primordial autocatalytic reaction networks
Varun Giri, Sanjay Jain

TL;DR
This paper proposes a model where autocatalytic sets (ACSs) in prebiotic chemistry can lead to the emergence of large molecules, like proteins and nucleic acids, by nested structures that overcome the need for extremely high catalytic strengths.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of nested ACSs with gradually increasing catalytic strengths, enabling the formation of large molecules in prebiotic chemistry models.
Findings
Nested ACSs facilitate large molecule dominance.
Gradual increase in catalytic strength reduces the required threshold.
Bistability allows for stable large molecule populations.
Abstract
Large molecules such as proteins and nucleic acids are crucial for life, yet their primordial origin remains a major puzzle. The production of large molecules, as we know it today, requires good catalysts, and the only good catalysts we know that can accomplish this task consist of large molecules. Thus the origin of large molecules is a chicken and egg problem in chemistry. Here we present a mechanism, based on autocatalytic sets (ACSs), that is a possible solution to this problem. We discuss a mathematical model describing the population dynamics of molecules in a stylized but prebiotically plausible chemistry. Large molecules can be produced in this chemistry by the coalescing of smaller ones, with the smallest molecules, the `food set', being buffered. Some of the reactions can be catalyzed by molecules within the chemistry with varying catalytic strengths. Normally the…
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