Hi everyone,
I couldn't find a 'beginners forum' or something of that nature to put my first post in, so here it is in this one as this forum is related to my first question. Hi all =)
Ok, so here is my question, with a bit of preamble to give it validity. Along with my general curiosity on all science topics, from engineering to genetics to astronomy to paleontology, I have developed a new curiosity for the ongoing debate of where life on our planet first came from. I generally understand the theorized process of how chemical compounds became amino acids that eventually became very large coils of proteins that eventually became what we identify as genetic code. I also understand that various steps in this process have been verified under lab conditions. What I do not understand in all this, is the term 'self-replicating', as pertains to the critical step at which the proteins are able to produce copies of themselves. The misunderstanding, I think, comes from my own missing bits of microbiology and molecular biology knowledge, and that's what I've come here to ask for. That question is, what is the science behind how these proteins are considered self-replicating?
As my own mind envisions this process, using the function of a single cell as its example, these proteins in fact do not in any fashion replicate themselves in the simple sense of spontaneously sprouting extensions of every adjoined compound and eventually producing some siamese twin molecule. As I envision it, these complex proteins in fact developed ALONG WITH groups of other complex molecules, including the disassemblers, reassemblers, enzymes, etc etc etc. In other words, for the self-replicating proteins to have originated, many other complex molecules had to develop in parallel that allowed them to replicate.
A mental picture of duplicating a city building could be used, I suppose - a building (which is just as inanimate as a complex protein molecule) cannot replicate itself, but with materials on hand and an army of helper molecules (workers) that are good at tasks like arranging these materials and reverse-engineering the building and supporting various intermediate structures, copies of the buliding could be produced with high efficiency and high accuracy. From a sufficiently high altitude, one may only see the large chunks of the buliding shaping themselves and draw the conclusion that somehow this structure is duplicating itself.
Is my idea anywhere near correct? As a related side note, if anyone can provide links to essays or papers written on the idea, I'd welcome the info. As aforementioned, I ask this question only because I feel I don't understand it (along with many many other people) because I am missing pieces of information.
Thanks, everyone =)