One of the most striking aspects of the energy-extracting and -storing
machinery of living creatures is its universality. Some processes
are shared by all forms of life, and we can assume that this is
because they are very old components of a common metabolic heritage
of related organisms. Other reactions and processes are possessed
only by one branch or another of the living family, and by peeling
these layers of metabolism back and looking for similarities to
other reactions, we may be able to decide how the chemical machinery
that we see today first evolved.
The first living organisms probably were ATP-using, judging from
the universality that ATP holds as a short-term energy-storage molecule.
We can imagine primitive one-celled creatures evolving glycolysis
to make more ATP when competition had depleted the natural supply.
This may or may not be true, but it is plausible. In any event,
glycolysis as a means of extracting energy from glucose proved so
beneficial that it, too, became fixed in the chemistry of life.
Some bacteria, such as the strictly anaerobic Clostridia, never
progressed beyond this stage, and are found today fermenting in
anaerobic pockets of our world, away from the oxygen gas that is
deadly to them, although it is the breath of life to most organisms.
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Photosynthesis broke the dependence on the environment for high-free-energy
molecules. Bacteria that could absorb light energy and use it to
make their own glucose henceforth were freed from the constraints
of a scavenging existence. They trapped light with chlorophyll and
took hydrogen from H2S to make NADH and ATP, and used
these products of the light reactions to drive a dark-reaction synthesis
of glucose, with the aid of a set of reactions that look very much
like glycolysis in reverse. But by turning gluconeogenesis into
a cyclic process involving a five-carbon sugar as a "carrier"
molecule, these bacteria found a way to begin the synthesis at the
one-carbon C02 stage, instead of the three-carbon pyruvate
stage that was the starting point of the older mechanism.
The blue-green algae changed the light reactions of photosynthesis
from a one-photocenter process that uses a good but scarce hydrogen
donor, H2S, into a two-photocenter process that uses
a poor but exceedingly common donor, water. This increased by many
times the amount of life this planet could support. The oxygen that
this kind of photosynthesis released is believed to have permanently
changed the character of the atmosphere of the planet. We will come
back to this important point in Chapter
26 when we discuss the origin of life on Earth.
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