Harold Morowitz, D. Smith

Paper #: 04-07-024

We analyze the stoichiometry, energetics, and reaction concentration dependence of the reductive Tricarboxylic Acid (rTCA) cycle, as a universal and possibly primordial metabolic core. The rTCA reaction sequence is a network-autocatalytic cycle along the relaxation pathway for redox couples in nonequilibrium reducing environments, which provides starting organic compounds for the synthesis of all major classes of biomolecules. The concentration dependence of its reactions suggests it as a pre-cellular bulk process. We propose that rTCA is statistically favored among competing redox relaxation pathways under early-earth conditions, and that this feature drove its emergence and also accounts for its evolutionary robustness and universality. The ability to enhance the rate of core reactions creates an energetic basis for selection of subsequent layers of biological complexity.

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