Thermophilic Behavior of Heat-Dissociative Coacervate Droplets

Authors
Kim, YoungsunZheng, Yuebing
Issue Date
2024-11
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Citation
Nano Letters
Abstract
In exploring the genesis of life, liquid-liquid phase-separated coacervate droplets have been proposed as primitive protocells. Within the hydrothermal hypothesis, these droplets would emerge from molecule-rich hot fluids and thus be subjected to temperature gradients. Investigating their thermophoretic behavior can provide insights into protocell footprints in thermal landscapes, advancing our understanding of life's origins. Here, we report the thermophilic behavior of heat-dissociative droplets, contrary to the intuition that heat-associative condensates would prefer hotter areas. This aspect implies the preferential presence of heat-dissociative primordial condensates near hydrothermal environments, facilitating molecular incorporation and biochemical syntheses. Additionally, our investigations reveal similarities between thermophoretic and electrophoretic motions, dictated by molecular redistribution within droplets due to their fluid nature, which necessitates revising current electrophoresis frameworks for surface charge characterization. Our study elucidates how coacervate droplets navigate thermal and electric fields, reveals their thermal-landscape-dependent molecular characteristics, and bridges foundational theories of early life: the hydrothermal and condensate-as-protocell hypotheses.
Keywords
INTERFACIAL-TENSION; thermophoresis; liquid-liquid phaseseparation; origin of life; coacervate droplets; polyelectrolytes
ISSN
1530-6984
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/151310
DOI
10.1021/acs.nanolett.4c03058
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2024
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