BIO 200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 4.4: Phospholipid, Cyanobacteria, Micropaleontology

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Nucleic acids and the origin of life - chapter 4. 4. Life is separated from the environment within structurally via cells. Internal contents of a cell are separated from the non biological environment by a membrane. Membrane is both a barrier and a regulator of what enters and leaves the cell. Important because it permits the interior of the cell to maintain a chemical composition that is different from its external environment. Jack szostak and colleagues at harvard built a lab model where they put fatty acids into water, which formed huddled when they came in contact with the water. Hydrophilic heads faced outwards to interact with the aqueous solution. Hydrophobic tails faced inwards to avoid contact with the water. If water was trapped inside the huddle a lipid bilayer was formed so that the polar heads of the fatty acids faced both inwards and outwards.

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