The Origin of Life in the Light of Evolution
Bet\"ul Ka\c{c}ar, Tom A. Williams, Laura Eme, Johann Peter Gogarten, Patricia Sanchez-Baracaldo, Anja Spang, Frank O. Aylward, Michael Travisano, Paula V. Welander, Julie A. Huber, Vaughn S. Cooper, Paul E. Turner, Timothy W. Lyons, Andrew D. Ellington, Shelley D. Copley

TL;DR
This paper emphasizes that understanding the origin of life requires an evolutionary perspective, integrating population genetics and ecology to explore how pre-biological systems evolved into complex life forms.
Contribution
It advocates expanding origin-of-life research to include evolutionary frameworks, synthesizing evidence from multiple disciplines and outlining a research agenda involving models and experiments.
Findings
LUCA was a complex, ecologically adapted population.
Evolutionary processes like selection and drift shaped early life.
Synthetic biology can test hypotheses about life's origins.
Abstract
The origin of life is often framed primarily as a chemical problem, yet life's defining feature is evolution. Advances in geochemistry, prebiotic chemistry, and molecular biology have produced diverse scenarios for the emergence of genomes, metabolism, and cellular compartments on the early Earth, but most of these models lack a population-genetics framework. Here, we argue that origin-of-life research must expand from asking simply how life began to exploring how it evolved from pre-biological systems. Synthesizing evidence from comparative genomics, phylogenetics, biochemistry, and geoscience, we emphasize that the last universal common ancestor (LUCA) was already a complex, ecologically adapted population far removed from the starting point of life, implying a deep pre-LUCA evolutionary history. We highlight how population genetics, ecology, and synthetic biology can constrain…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
