The Blind Watchmaker (26 page)

Read The Blind Watchmaker Online

Authors: Richard Dawkins

Tags: #Science, #Life Sciences, #Evolution, #General

But, in any case, the organic primevalsoup theory is not the one I have chosen for my illustration of the kind of solution that we must look for. I did choose it in my first book,
The Selfish Gene, so
I thought that here I would fly a kite for a somewhat less-fashionable theory (although it recently has started gaining ground), which seems to me to have at least a sporting chance of being right. Its audacity is appealing, and it does illustrate well the properties that any satisfying theory of the origin of life must have. This is the ‘inorganic mineral’ theory of the Glasgow chemist Graham Cairns-Smith, first proposed 20 years ago and since developed and elaborated in three books, the latest of which,
Seven Clues to the Origin of Life
, treats the origin of life as a mystery needing a Sherlock Holmes solution.

Cairns-Smith’s view of the DNA\protein machinery is that it probably came into existence relatively recently, perhaps as recently as three billion years ago. Before that there were many generations of cumulative selection, based upon some quite different replicating entities. Once DNA was there, it proved to be so much more efficient as a replicator, and so much more powerful in its effects on its own replication, that the original replication system that spawned it was cast off and forgotten. The modem DNA machinery, according to this view, is a late-comer, a recent usurper of the role of fundamental replicator, having taken over that role from an earlier and cruder replicator. There may even have been a whole series of such usurpations, but the original replication process must have been sufficiently simple to have come about through what I have dubbed ‘single-step selection’.

Chemists divide their subject into two main branches, organic and inorganic. Organic chemistry is the chemistry of one particular element, carbon. Inorganic chemistry is all the rest. Carbon is important and deserves to have its own private branch of chemistry, partly because life chemistry is all carbon-chemistry, and partly because those same properties that make carbon-chemistry suitable for life also make it suitable for industrial processes, such as those of the plastics industry. The essential property of carbon atoms that makes them so suitable for life and for industrial synthetics, is that they join together to form a limitless repertoire of different kinds of very large molecules. Another element that has some of these same properties is silicon. Although the chemistry of modern Earth-bound life is all carbon-chemistry, this may not be true all over the universe, and it may not always have been true on this Earth. Cairns-Smith believes that the original life on this planet was based on selfreplicating inorganic crystals such as silicates. If this is true, organic replicators, and eventually DNA, must later have taken over or usurped the role.

He gives some arguments for the general plausibility of this idea of ‘takeover’. An arch of stones, for instance, is a stable structure capable of standing for many years even if there is no cement to bind it. Building a complex structure by evolution is like trying to build a mortarless arch if you are allowed to touch only one stone at a time. Think about the task naively, and it can’t be done. The arch will stand once the last stone is in place, but the intermediate stages are unstable. It’s quite easy to build the arch, however, if you are allowed to subtract stones as well as add them. Start by building a solid heap of stones, then build the arch resting on top of this solid foundation. Then, when the arch is all in position, including the vital keystone at the top, carefully remove the supporting stones and, with a modicum of luck, the arch will remain standing. Stonehenge is incomprehensible until we realize that the builders used some kind of scaffolding, or perhaps ramps of earth,
which are no longer there
. We can see only the endproduct, and have to infer the vanished scaffolding. Similarly, DNA and protein are two pillars of a stable and elegant arch, which persists once all its parts simultaneously exist. It is hard to imagine it arising by any step-by-step process unless some earlier scaffolding has completely disappeared. That scaffolding must itself have been built by an earlier form of cumulative selection, at whose nature we can only guess. But it must have been based upon replicating entities with power over their own future.

Cairns-Smith’s guess is that the original replicators were crystals of inorganic materials, such as those found in clays and muds. A crystal is just a large orderly array of atoms or molecules in the solid state. Because of properties that we can think of as their ‘shape’, atoms and small molecules tend naturally to pack themselves together in a fixed and orderly manner. It is almost as though they ‘want’ to slot together in a particular way, but this illusion is just an inadvertent consequence of their properties. Their ‘preferred’ way of slotting together shapes the whole crystal. It also means that, even in a large crystal such as a diamond, any part of the crystal is
exactly
the same as any other part, except where there are flaws. If we could shrink ourselves to the atomic scale, we would see almost endless rows of atoms, stretching to the horizon in straight lines - galleries of geometric repetition.

Since it is replication we are interested in, the first thing we must know is, can crystals replicate their structure? Crystals are made of myriads of layers of atoms (or equivalent), and each layer builds upon the layer below. Atoms (or ions; the difference needn’t concern us) float around free in solution, but if they happen to encounter a crystal they have a natural tendency to slot into position on the surface of the crystal. A solution of common salt contains sodium ions and chloride ions jostling about in a more or less chaotic fashion. A crystal of common salt is a packed, orderly array of sodium ions alternating with chloride ions at right angles to one another. When ions floating in the water happen to bump into the hard surface of the crystal, they tend to stick. And they stick in just the right places to cause a new layer to be added to the crystal just like the layer below. So once a crystal gets started it grows, each layer being the same as the layer below.

Sometimes crystals spontaneously start to form in solution. At other times they have to be ‘seeded’, either by particles of dust or by small crystals dropped in from elsewhere. Caims-Smith invites us to perform the following experiment. Dissolve a large quantity of photographer’s ‘hypo’ fixer in very hot water. Then let the solution cool down, being careful not to let any dust drop in. The solution is now ‘supersaturated’, ready and waiting to make crystals, but with no seed crystals to start the process going. I quote from Cairns-Smith’s
Seven Clues to the Origin of Life
:

Carefully take the lid off the beaker, drop one tiny piece of ‘hypo’ crystal onto the surface of the solution, and watch amazed at what happens. Your crystal grows visibly: it breaks up from time to time and the pieces also grow … Soon your beaker is crowded with crystals, some several centimetres long. Then after a few minutes it all stops. The magic solution has lost its power - although if you want another performance just re-heat and re-cool the beaker … to be supersaturated means to have more dissolved than there ought to be … the cold supersaturated solution almost literally did not know what to do. It had to be ‘told’ by adding a piece of crystal that already had its units (billions and billions of them) packed together in the way that is characteristic for ‘hypo’ crystals. The solution had to be seeded.

Some chemical substances have the potential to crystallize in two alternative ways. Graphite and diamonds, for instance, are both crystals of pure carbon. Their atoms are identical. The two substances differ from each other only in the geometric pattern with which the carbon atoms are packed. In diamonds, the carbon atoms are packed in a tetrahedral pattern which is extremely stable. This is why diamonds are so hard. In graphite the carbon atoms are arranged in flat hexagons layered on top of each other. The bonding between layers is weak, and they therefore slide over each other, which is why graphite feels slippery and is used as a lubricant. Unfortunately you can’t crystallize diamonds out of a solution by seeding them, as you can with hypo. If you could, you’d be rich; no on second thoughts you wouldn’t, because any fool could do the same.

Now suppose we have a supersaturated solution of some substance, like hypo in that it was eager to crystallize out of solution, and like carbon in that it was capable of crystallizing in either of two ways. One way might be somewhat like graphite, with the atoms arranged in layers, leading to little flat crystals; while the other way gives chunky, diamond-shaped crystals. Now we simultaneously drop into our supersaturated solution a tiny flat crystal and a tiny chunky crystal. We can describe what would happen in an elaboration of Calms-Smith’s description of his hypo experiment. You watch amazed at what happens. Your two crystals grow visibly: they break up from time to time and the pieces also grow. Flat crystals give rise to a population of flat crystals. Chunky crystals give rise to a population of chunky crystals. If there is any tendency for one type of crystal to grow and split more quickly than the other, we shall have a simple kind of natural selection. But the process still lacks a vital ingredient in order to give rise to evolutionary change. That ingredient is hereditary variation, or something equivalent to it.Instead of just two types of crystal, there must be a whole range of minor variants that form lineages of like shape, and that sometimes ‘mutate’ to produce new shapes. Do real crystals have something corresponding to hereditary mutation?

Clays and muds and rocks are made of tiny crystals. They are abundant on Earth and probably always have been. When you look at the surface of some types of clay and other minerals with a scanning electron microscope you see an amazing and beautiful sight. Crystals grow like rows of flowers or cactuses, gardens of inorganic rose petals, tiny spirals like cross-sections of succulent plants, bristling organ pipes, complicated angular shapes folded as if in miniature crystalline origami, writhing growths like worm casts or squeezed toothpaste. The ordered patterns become even more striking at greater levels of magnification. At levels that betray the actual position of atoms, the surface of a crystal is seen to have all the regularity of a machinewoven piece of herringbone tweed. But - and here is the vital point - there are flaws. Right in the middle of an expanse of orderly herringbone there can be a patch, identical to the rest except that it is twisted round at a different angle so that the ‘weave’ goes off in another direction. Or the weave may lie in the same direction, but each row has ‘slipped’ half a row to one side. Nearly all naturally occurring crystals have flaws. And once a flaw has appeared, it tends to be copied as subsequent layers of crystal encrust themselves on top of it.

Flaws can occur anywhere over the surface of a crystal. If you like thinking about capacity for information storage (I do), you can imagine the enormous number of different patterns of flaws that could be created over the surface of a crystal. All those calculations about packing the New Testament into the DNA of a single bacterium could be done just as impressively for almost any crystal. What DNA has over normal crystals is a means by which its information can be read. Leaving aside the problem of read-out, you could easily devise an arbitrary code whereby flaws in the atomic structure of the crystal denote binary numbers. You could then pack several New Testaments into a mineral crystal the size of a pin’s head. On a larger scale, this is essentially how music information is stored on the surface of a laser (‘compact’) disc. The musical notes are converted, by computer, into binary numbers. A laser is used to etch a pattern of tiny flaws in the otherwise glassy smooth surface of the disc. Each little hole etched corresponds to a binary 1 (or a 0, the labels are arbitrary). When you play the disc, another laser beam ‘reads’ the pattern of flaws, and a special-purpose computer built into the player turns the binary numbers back into sound vibrations, which are amplified so that you can hear them.

Although laser discs are used today mainly for music, you could pack the whole
Encyclopaedia Britannica
onto one of them, and read it out using the same laser technique. Flaws in crystals at the atomic level are far smaller than the pits etched in a laser disc’s surface, so crystals can potentially pack more information into a given area. Indeed DNA molecules, whose capacity for storing information has already impressed us, are something close to crystals themselves. Although clay crystals theoretically could store the same prodigious quantities of information as DNA or laser discs can, nobody is suggesting that they ever did. The role of clay and other mineral crystals in the theory is to act as the original ‘low-tech’ replicators, the ones that were eventually replaced by high-tech DNA. They form spontaneously in the waters of our planet without the elaborate ‘machinery’ that DNA needs; and they develop flaws spontaneously, some of which can be replicated in subsequent layers of crystal. If fragments of suitably flawed crystal later broke away, we could imagine them acting as ‘seeds’ for new crystals, each one ‘inheriting’ its ‘parent’s’ pattern of flaws.

So, we have a speculative picture of mineral crystals on the primeval Earth showing some of the properties of replication, multiplication, heredity and mutation that would have been necessary in order for a form of cumulative selection to get started. There is still the missing ingredient of ‘power’: the nature of the replicators must somehow have influenced their own likelihood of being replicated. When we were talking about replicators in the abstract, we saw that ‘power’ might simply be direct properties of the replicator itself, intrinsic properties like ‘stickiness’. At this elementary level, the name ‘power’ seems scarcely justified. I use it only because of what it can become in later stages of evolution: the power of a snake’s fang, for instance, to propagate (by its indirect consequences on snake survival) DNA coding for fangs. Whether the original low-tech replicators were mineral crystals or organic direct forerunners of DNA itself, we may guess that the ‘power’ they exercised was direct and elementary, like stickiness. Advanced levers of power, like a snake’s fang or an orchid’s flower, came far later.

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