Replication and division are two of the most fundamental properties of living systems. Without replication, Darwinian evolution would not be possible, and life could never have reached the degree of complexity we see today. However, exactly how mixtures of non-living molecules developed the ability to replicate and divide, remains one of the biggest mysteries in modern science. Various molecular replicators have been investigated previously, but they are all destined to become extinct by dilution, since they lack a surrounding compartment that divides spontaneously during replication.
In this proposal, we aim at developing a new class of coacervate-based protocells that are capable of active growth and template-directed replication. The coacervates we propose here are condensed liquid droplets with a unique dual role: they act as a compartment that holds together and concentrates the template molecules and the building blocks, and they provide the right chemical environment for the replication reactions to take place at an appreciable rate.
The overall objective of this ERC proposal is to develop coacervate-based protocells that are capable of self-replication and evolution, as a physicochemical platform to study the link between compartmentalization and replication and the general principles underlying the emergence of living cells. The achieve this overall objective, we have 1) developed a wide range of chemically active coacervates that are capable of growth through chemical and enzymatic reactions, including reduction/oxidation, phosphorylation, native chemical ligation, and (de)acetylation. We have also 2) developed new methodologies to quantify the volume fraction of coacervates, the surface charge of coacervates and the binding strength of ions and small molecules to coacervate-forming molecules. Together with an in silico platform to model chemical reaction networks in coacervates, this enables us now to look at the rate of self-replication by RNA inside coacervates. Finally, 3) we developed two types of light-switchable coacervates to locally control birth and death rates in coacervate solutions to explore primitive evolution in coacervate populations.