Concentration fluctuations are always present in solutions; it has been noticed that, in chemical systems, they can lead to deviations from what is expected from mass-action equations. I recently described the class of the "marginally stable" chemical systems; namely, a system that have an infinity of stationary states forming a continuous curve, and I showed that they present such deviations, which appear as a drift along the stationary-state curve. Here I describe various marginally stable chemical reaction networks, including replicating molecules, and I present numerical calculations based on reaction-diffusion master equations, showing that the thermodynamic fluctuations induce a drift. This drift can be interpreted in terms of evolution toward a more efficiently replicating system and is analogous to a Darwinian evolution. The concentration fluctuations observed during the drift are scale invariant. Relevance of this phenomenon to the origin of life is discussed. I propose that marginal stability is the mathematical property defining chemical reaction networks potentially involved in the origin of life.

Brogioli, D. (2011). Marginal stability in chemical systems and its relevance in the origin of life. PHYSICAL REVIEW E, STATISTICAL, NONLINEAR, AND SOFT MATTER PHYSICS, 84(3) [10.1103/PhysRevE.84.031931].

Marginal stability in chemical systems and its relevance in the origin of life

BROGIOLI, DORIANO COSTANTINO
2011

Abstract

Concentration fluctuations are always present in solutions; it has been noticed that, in chemical systems, they can lead to deviations from what is expected from mass-action equations. I recently described the class of the "marginally stable" chemical systems; namely, a system that have an infinity of stationary states forming a continuous curve, and I showed that they present such deviations, which appear as a drift along the stationary-state curve. Here I describe various marginally stable chemical reaction networks, including replicating molecules, and I present numerical calculations based on reaction-diffusion master equations, showing that the thermodynamic fluctuations induce a drift. This drift can be interpreted in terms of evolution toward a more efficiently replicating system and is analogous to a Darwinian evolution. The concentration fluctuations observed during the drift are scale invariant. Relevance of this phenomenon to the origin of life is discussed. I propose that marginal stability is the mathematical property defining chemical reaction networks potentially involved in the origin of life.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Abiogenesis; origin of life; marginal stability in chemical reactions
English
2011
84
3
031931
open
Brogioli, D. (2011). Marginal stability in chemical systems and its relevance in the origin of life. PHYSICAL REVIEW E, STATISTICAL, NONLINEAR, AND SOFT MATTER PHYSICS, 84(3) [10.1103/PhysRevE.84.031931].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/36531
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