MrSandman Posted May 15, 2011 Posted May 15, 2011 Hey everyone I'm wanting to write a short five page paper on one of the following: The origin of replication The origin of reproduction Horizontal Gene Transfer I was debating whether I should put this in the HW section, but I think this is a more appropriate area. Anyways, I was wondering if you guys could direct me to the names of any peer review journal articles that are a must-read for any of these topics. I'm particularly interested in the origin of replication, because this is the real problem I have with the origin of life. That even if life could occur, it would have to survive long enough to replicate. Like I'm wondering what is the prevailing theory on the subject. So please when you comment on these topics, please attach sources. They don't have to be peer-review, but it'd be nice. If you don't give me peer-review sources I'll just end up back tracking your source anyways.
Stefan-CoA Posted May 16, 2011 Posted May 16, 2011 Origin or Replication/Reproduction are as far as I know, not fully understood yet and possibly too speculative for a 5 page essay. Try HGT rather. Best place to start off is wikipedia and follow their sources. Then try google scholar, with your topic and "review" added. If you have access to university resources you can try that. Libraries too.
Chalky Posted May 21, 2011 Posted May 21, 2011 Try Lane, Allen and Martin (2010) How did LUCA make a living? Chemiosmosis in the origin of life for a slightly unconventional viewpoint on the origin of life. Lane and Archibald (2008) cover horizontal gene transfer in eukaryotes, but +1 on Stefan's suggestion for Google scholar. 1
Essay Posted May 22, 2011 Posted May 22, 2011 Hey everyone I'm wanting to write a short five page paper on one of the following: The origin of replication The origin of reproduction ... Anyways, I was wondering if you guys could direct me to the names of any peer review journal articles that are a must-read for any of these topics. I'm particularly interested in the origin of replication, because this is the real problem I have with the origin of life. That even if life could occur, it would have to survive long enough to replicate. Like I'm wondering what is the prevailing theory on the subject. So please when you comment on these topics, please attach sources. They don't have to be peer-review, but it'd be nice. If you don't give me peer-review sources I'll just end up back tracking your source anyways. Fritjof Capra's "Web of Life" is a great book for understanding the complexity of emergence (as a phenomenon), and then ...the emergence of complexity (life). As a biochemist, I've been studying geochemistry to better understand the expression of climate within our biogeochemosphere. Introduction to Organic Geochemistry, Killops & Killops (2005) is a great resource for learning about all the complexity available, but doesn't address origins specifically. One of these books (if I can recall from last year) below, had a few introductory chapters on the physical chemistry and thermodynamics behind any origins of life and replication, with vivid geochemical scenarios related: Modern Biogeochemistry, Vladimir M. Bashkin, 2006 Biochemistry of Microbial Degredation, Colin Ratledge, 1994 Bacterial Growth and Form, Arthur L. Koch, 2001 Advances in Microbial Physiology v.54, Robert K. Poole, 2008 Modern Multidisciplinary Applied Microbiology, Antonio Mendez-Vilas, 2006 Predatory Prokaryotes, Edouard Jurkevitch, 2007 You could probably survey the table of contents online, for at least some of these, to see if one pops out. ~
MrSandman Posted May 23, 2011 Author Posted May 23, 2011 Try Lane, Allen and Martin (2010) How did LUCA make a living? Chemiosmosis in the origin of life for a slightly unconventional viewpoint on the origin of life. Lane and Archibald (2008) cover horizontal gene transfer in eukaryotes, but +1 on Stefan's suggestion for Google scholar. Thank you very much, very helpful, although I have switched to focus on symbiosis as the origin of species. The first source I will make sure to read just for enjoyment.
crazynutsx Posted June 9, 2011 Posted June 9, 2011 no one has any idea how cells started to replicated themselves and im not sure they ever will
Edtharan Posted June 10, 2011 Posted June 10, 2011 no one has any idea how cells started to replicated themselves and im not sure they ever will Umm... Wrong: http://www.youtube.com/user/cdk007 All these steps have been confirm in labs. The problem is not that we don't have any idea, it is that we have too many ideas so we aren't sure which one was the one that occurred.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now