Royal Society Open Science (Nov 2024)
Directionality theory and the origin of life
Abstract
The origin of cellular life can be described in terms of the transition from inorganic matter to the emergence of cooperative assemblies of organic matter: DNA and proteins, capable of replication and metabolism. Directionality theory is a mathematical theory of the collective behaviour of networks of organic matter: activated macromolecules, cells and higher organisms. Evolutionary entropy, a generalization of the thermodynamic entropy of Boltzmann, is a statistical measure of the cooperativity of the biotic components. The cornerstone of Directionality theory is the Entropic Principle of Evolution: evolutionary entropy increases in systems driven by a stable energy source, and decreases in systems subject to a fluctuating energy source. This article invokes the Entropic Principle of Evolution—an extension to biological systems of the Second Law of Thermodynamics—to provide an adaptive rationale for the following sequence of transformations that define the emergence of cellular life: (i) the self‐assembly of activated macromolecules from inorganic matter; (ii) the emergence of an RNA world, defined by RNA molecules with catalytic and replicative properties; and (iii) the origin of cellular life, the integration of the three carbon-based polymers—DNA, proteins and lipids, to generate a metabolic and replicative unit.
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