Origins of Life Systems Chemistry
- 👤 Speaker: Prof John Sutherland (MRC LMB) 🔗 Website
- 📅 Date & Time: Thursday 17 October 2019, 18:00 - 19:30
- 📍 Venue: Winstanley Lecture Hall, Trinity College
Abstract
Our first talk of the Michaelmas Term will be about the origins of life systems chemistry by Professor John Sutherland FRS , who is the research leader in the Protein & Nucleic Acid Chemistry Division at MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology (LMB) in Cambridge.
Professor Sutherland explores the chemical origins of molecular biology and his main interest is in uncovering prebiotically plausible syntheses of the informational, catalytic and compartment–forming molecules necessary for the emergence of life.
The talk will be in the Winstanley Lecture Hall at Trinity on the 17th October. The doors will open at 18:00, with drinks and refreshments provided, and the talk will start at 18:15.
“How can chemistry morph into biology? This is the key question about the origin of life, be it on our planet several billion years ago, or elsewhere and so we need to think about chemistry in the context of planetary science if we want to know where we came from and whether or not we are likely to be alone in the Universe. The chemistry used by biology to fabricate its various components is by and large hopelessly inefficient in the absence of enzyme catalysts, so we need to look for different chemistry that can make the same componentry efficiently without enzymes. But where do we look? One approach is to guess at the environment and then use laboratory simulation to investigate its chemistry. The problem with this is the guesswork – there were presumably many different environments on early Earth and it is not obvious what chemistry they might be associated with. An alternative approach is to explore chemistry in a pretty much unconstrained way to try and find out if all the molecules needed to kick-start biology can be made under similar conditions from plausible feedstocks. If they can and the conditions required correspond to a particular environment on early Earth then that environment is strongly implicated and can further guide chemical investigations. In this lecture, I will present the results of this latter approach and demonstrate how hellish conditions on Hadean-Archean Earth could have set the stage for the transition from chemistry to biology.”
Series This talk is part of the Trinity College Science Society (TCSS) series.
Included in Lists
- Chris Davis' list
- custom
- Guy Emerson's list
- Trinity College Science Society (TCSS)
- Winstanley Lecture Hall, Trinity College
Note: Ex-directory lists are not shown.
![[Talks.cam]](/static/images/talkslogosmall.gif)

Prof John Sutherland (MRC LMB) 
Thursday 17 October 2019, 18:00-19:30