Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Oparin–Haldane Theory of Origin of Life

 


Oparin–Haldane Theory of Origin of Life

Introduction

One of the most fundamental questions in biology is:

"How did life originate on Earth?"

The scientific explanation for the origin of life is provided by the Oparin–Haldane Theory of Chemical Evolution, while the diversification of life is explained by the theory of Biological Evolution.

The Earth formed approximately 4.5 billion years ago (4500 million years ago). The earliest evidence of life dates back to approximately 3.5–3.8 billion years ago. The modern scientific understanding suggests that life originated through a gradual process of chemical evolution and subsequently diversified through biological evolution.

Part I: Oparin–Haldane Theory of Origin of Life

Historical Background

Scientists

The theory was independently proposed by:

Therefore, it is called: Oparin–Haldane Theory

Also known as:

  • Theory of Chemical Evolution
  • Physico-Chemical Theory
  • Modern Abiogenesis Theory

Basic Concept of The Theory

According to Oparin and Haldane:

Life originated from non-living matter through a series of slow chemical reactions occurring in the primitive oceans of Earth. The first living organisms were formed gradually from simple inorganic molecules through increasingly complex organic compounds.

Conditions On Primitive Earth

Understanding primitive Earth is essential for understanding chemical evolution.

Age of Earth

Approximately: 4.5 Billion Years

Initially Earth was:

  • Extremely hot
  • Molten
  • Lifeless

No living organism could survive under such conditions.

Primitive Atmosphere

The early atmosphere was: Reducing Atmosphere, It lacked free oxygen.

Major Components

Gas

Approximate Presence

Hydrogen (H₂)

High

Methane (CH₄)

High

Ammonia (NH₃)

High

Water Vapour (H₂O)

High

Oxygen (O₂)

Absent

Significance

Absence of oxygen prevented oxidation and allowed formation of complex organic molecules.

Sources of Energy on Primitive Earth

Several powerful energy sources drove chemical reactions.

Energy Sources

  1. Lightning
  2. Ultraviolet radiation
  3. Volcanic eruptions
  4. Geothermal heat
  5. Cosmic radiation

These energy sources supplied activation energy for synthesis of organic compounds.

Chemical Evolution of Life

According to Oparin and Haldane, origin of life occurred through several stages.

Stage 1: Formation of Simple Organic Molecules

Primitive atmospheric gases reacted under high-energy conditions.

Examples Formed

  • Amino acids
  • Simple sugars
  • Nitrogenous bases
  • Fatty acids

These compounds accumulated in primitive oceans.

Primordial Soup Theory

Haldane proposed that oceans became rich in organic molecules. This organic-rich ocean is called:

Primordial Soup or Prebiotic Soup

Life originated from this chemical soup.

Stage 2: Formation of Complex Organic Molecules

Simple organic molecules combined to form:

Proteins

Amino acids → Proteins

Polysaccharides

Simple sugars → Complex carbohydrates

Nucleic Acids

Nitrogenous bases → RNA and DNA components

Stage 3: Formation of Protobionts

Organic molecules aggregated together forming primitive cell-like structures. Examples:

Coacervates (Proposed by Oparin)

Microspheres (Proposed by Sidney Fox)

Characteristics:

  • Membrane-like boundary
  • Ability to absorb substances
  • Growth-like properties

However, they were not living cells.

Stage 4: Origin of First Living Cells

Protobionts gradually acquired:

  • Self-replication
  • Metabolism
  • Heredity

Leading to formation of first primitive cells.

Characteristics of First Living Organisms

The earliest organisms were:

·       Anaerobic- No oxygen required.

·       Heterotrophic- Obtained food from preformed organic molecules.

·       Prokaryotic- Lacked nucleus and membrane-bound organelles.

Evolution of Autotrophs

As organic food resources decreased: Some organisms evolved the ability to synthesize food.

First Autotrophs

Chemosynthetic bacteria- used chemical energy to produce food.

Evolution of Photosynthesis

Later: Cyanobacteria evolved- They performed oxygenic photosynthesis.

Reaction:

CO₂ + H₂O → Carbohydrates + O₂

Oxygen Revolution

Photosynthetic organisms released oxygen into atmosphere. Consequences:

Formation of Oxygen Atmosphere

Gradually oxygen concentration increased.

Formation of Ozone Layer

O₂ → O₃

The ozone layer absorbed harmful UV radiation.

Evolution of Aerobic Organisms

With increasing oxygen:

  • Aerobic respiration evolved.
  • Energy production became more efficient.
  • Complex multicellular organisms appeared.

Miller–Urey Experiment (1953)

Experimental Proof of Oparin–Haldane Theory

Scientists:

Objective

To determine whether organic molecules could be synthesized under primitive Earth conditions.

Experimental Setup

Contained:

  • Methane (CH₄)
  • Ammonia (NH₃)
  • Hydrogen (H₂)
  • Water vapour

Electric sparks simulated lightning. Temperature were maintained high.

Observations

After one week: Several organic compounds formed:

Amino Acids

  • Glycine
  • Alanine

Also formed:

  • Organic acids
  • Urea

Conclusion

Organic molecules can be synthesized from inorganic substances under primitive Earth conditions.

Significance

Strong experimental support for Oparin–Haldane theory.

Limitations of Oparin–Haldane Theory

Although widely accepted:

Limitations

  1. Exact composition of primitive atmosphere uncertain.
  2. Does not fully explain origin of genetic code.
  3. Does not explain transition from RNA to DNA completely.
  4. Exact mechanism of first living cell formation remains unclear.

RNA World Hypothesis

Modern modification of chemical evolution theory.

Main Idea

RNA appeared before DNA and proteins. Reasons: RNA can:

  • Store information
  • Catalyze reactions (Ribozymes)

Thus, RNA may have been the first self-replicating molecule.

Flow Chart: Origin of Life

Primitive Earth

Reducing Atmosphere

Simple Organic Molecules

Complex Organic Molecules

Coacervates / Protobionts

First Anaerobic Heterotrophs

Chemosynthetic Organisms

Photosynthetic Cyanobacteria

Oxygen Atmosphere

Aerobic Organisms

Multicellular Life

Evolution of Biodiversity

High-Yield Points

·       Oparin and Haldane proposed Chemical Evolution Theory.

·       Primitive atmosphere contained CH₄, NH₃, H₂ and H₂O vapour but lacked free oxygen.

·       Primordial soup concept was proposed by Haldane.

·       Miller-Urey experiment (1953) synthesized amino acids under simulated primitive Earth conditions.

·       First living organisms were anaerobic heterotrophic prokaryotes.

·       Cyanobacteria caused oxygenation of Earth's atmosphere.

·       Homologous organs indicate divergent evolution.

·       Analogous organs indicate convergent evolution.

·       Archaeopteryx is a connecting link between reptiles and birds.

·       Fossils provide direct evidence of evolution.

·       Industrial melanism and antibiotic resistance demonstrate natural selection.

·       Molecular biology and DNA comparisons provide the strongest modern evidence for evolution.

Last-Minute Revision

Oparin–Haldane theory states that life originated through chemical evolution in the reducing atmosphere of primitive Earth. Organic molecules formed first, then complex macromolecules, protobionts, and finally living cells. The Miller–Urey experiment provided experimental support. Evolution of life is supported by fossil, anatomical, embryological, molecular, biogeographical, and direct observational evidence, all indicating common ancestry and gradual biological change over time.

 


Tuesday, June 23, 2026

ORIGIN OF LIFE AND EVOLUTION- AN INTRODUCTION

 


ORIGIN OF LIFE AND EVOLUTION

Introduction

The study of the origin of life and evolution explains how life appeared on Earth and how simple organisms gradually evolved into the vast diversity of plants, animals, and microorganisms present today.

Evolutionary Biology is the study of the history of life forms on Earth and the processes responsible for biological diversity.

PART I: Origin of Life

Introduction

Life on Earth originated approximately 3.5–4.0 billion years ago, whereas Earth itself formed about 4.5 billion years ago. Scientists have proposed several theories to explain the origin of life.

Theories of Origin of Life

1. Theory of Special Creation

Main Points

  • Life was created by a supernatural power.
  • All organisms were created simultaneously.
  • Species remain unchanged since creation.

Limitations

  • No scientific evidence.
  • Cannot explain fossils and evolutionary changes.

2. Theory of Spontaneous Generation (Abiogenesis)

Proposed By

  • Aristotle
  • Van Helmont

Main Idea

Living organisms arise spontaneously from non-living matter.

Examples

  • Maggots from decaying meat.
  • Frogs from mud.

Disproof

Francesco Redi (1668)

  • Meat kept in open jars developed maggots.
  • Covered jars did not.

Louis Pasteur (1861)

  • Swan-neck flask experiment.
  • Sterile broth remained free of microorganisms unless exposed to contamination.

Conclusion

"Life comes only from pre-existing life."

Biogenesis

Omne vivum ex vivo (Life originates from life.)

3. Panspermia Theory

Proposed By

  • Richter
  • Arrhenius

Main Idea

Life reached Earth from outer space in the form of spores or microorganisms.

Limitation

Does not explain the original origin of life.

4. Chemical Evolution Theory (Most Accepted)

Proposed By

  • Alexander Oparin (1924)
  • J.B.S. Haldane (1929)

Also Known As

Main Idea

Life evolved gradually from non-living chemicals through a series of chemical reactions.

Primitive Earth Conditions

Atmosphere Was:

  • Reducing in nature
  • No free oxygen

Major Gases

  • Hydrogen (H₂)
  • Methane (CH₄)
  • Ammonia (NH₃)
  • Water vapour (H₂O)

Energy Sources

  • Lightning
  • UV radiation
  • Volcanic heat
  • Cosmic radiation

Steps of Chemical Evolution

Step 1: Formation of Simple Organic Molecules

Inorganic gases reacted to form:

  • Amino acids
  • Sugars
  • Nitrogenous bases
  • Fatty acids

Step 2: Formation of Macromolecules

Small molecules combined to form:

  • Proteins
  • Nucleic acids
  • Polysaccharides

Step 3: Formation of Protobionts

Aggregates of organic molecules formed:

  • Coacervates
  • Microspheres

Step 4: First Living Cells

Primitive anaerobic cells appeared.

Step 5: Evolution of Photosynthetic Organisms

  • Cyanobacteria evolved.
  • Oxygen released into atmosphere.

Step 6: Formation of Ozone Layer

Oxygen → Ozone (O₃).  Allowed evolution of complex life forms.

Miller–Urey Experiment (1953)

Scientists- Stanley Miller and Harold Urey

Objective- To test the Oparin-Haldane hypothesis experimentally.

Experimental Setup

Contained:

  • CH₄
  • NH₃
  • H₂
  • Water vapour

Electric sparks simulated lightning.

Observations

After one week: Formation of:

  • Amino acids
  • Organic acids
  • Other organic compounds

Significance

Provided experimental evidence that organic molecules can form from inorganic substances under primitive Earth conditions.

Biological Evolution

Definition

Evolution is the gradual change in inherited characteristics of populations over successive generations resulting in new species.

Modern Definition

Evolution = Change in gene frequencies in a population over time.

PART II: SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCES FOR EVOLUTION

The strongest support for evolution comes from multiple independent fields of science.

1. PALAEONTOLOGICAL (FOSSIL) EVIDENCE

Fossils

Fossils are preserved remains, impressions, or traces of ancient organisms found in rocks.

Importance of Fossils

Fossils reveal:

  • Extinct organisms
  • Transitional forms
  • Evolutionary trends
  • Geological age of organisms

Key Observation

Lower rock strata contain older fossils while upper layers contain younger fossils.

Examples

Archaeopteryx

Archaeopteryx Shows characters of both:

  • Reptiles
  • Birds

Reptilian Features

  • Teeth
  • Long tail
  • Claws

Avian Features

  • Feathers
  • Wings

Thus, Archaeopteryx acts as a connecting link.

Horse Evolution

Sequence:

Eohippus
→ Mesohippus
→ Merychippus
→ Pliohippus
→ Equus

Changes:

  • Increase in body size
  • Reduction of toes
  • Enlargement of teeth

Provides clear evidence of gradual evolution.

2. Comparative Anatomical Evidence

A. Homologous Organs

Definition

Organs having:

  • Same origin
  • Similar basic structure
  • Different functions

Examples

Forelimbs of:

  • Human
  • Whale
  • Bat
  • Cheetah

All possess:

  • Humerus
  • Radius
  • Ulna
  • Carpals
  • Metacarpals
  • Phalanges

but perform different functions.

Significance

Indicates:

Divergent Evolution

One ancestral species gives rise to many different species due to adaptation to different environments.

Example

Mammalian forelimbs.

B. Analogous Organs

Definition

Organs having:

  • Different origin
  • Different structure
  • Similar function

Examples

  1. Wings of bird and butterfly
  2. Eye of octopus and mammals

Significance

Indicates: Convergent evolution

Convergent Evolution

Unrelated organisms independently evolve similar adaptations under similar environmental conditions.

C. Vestigial Organs

Definition

Reduced and functionless organs inherited from ancestors.

Human Examples

  • Vermiform appendix
  • Coccyx (tail bone)
  • Wisdom teeth
  • Ear muscles

Significance

Indicate ancestral structures and evolutionary history.

3. Embryological Evidence

Proposed By Ernst Haeckel

Observation- Early embryos of vertebrates show remarkable similarities.

Examples:

  • Fish
  • Amphibians
  • Reptiles
  • Birds
  • Mammals

All possess:

  • Pharyngeal gill slits
  • Notochord
  • Tail

Significance- Suggests common ancestry.

4. Molecular and Biochemical Evidence

Modern biology provides some of the strongest evidence for evolution.

Similarity in DNA

All living organisms use:

  • DNA as genetic material
  • Universal genetic code

Common Metabolic Pathways

Processes like:

  • Glycolysis
  • ATP production

occur in almost all organisms.

Protein Similarities

Many proteins show remarkable similarity across species.

Example

Cytochrome-c protein is highly conserved.

Significance

Greater molecular similarity indicates closer evolutionary relationship.

5. Biogeographical Evidence

Definition

Study of geographical distribution of organisms.

Examples

Australian Marsupials

Examples:

  • Kangaroo
  • Koala
  • Wombat

Found mainly in Australia.

Darwin's Finches

Observed in the Galápagos Islands. Different beak types evolved according to food habits.

Significance

Shows adaptation and speciation due to geographic isolation.

6. Evidence From Artificial Selection

Humans have produced new varieties through selective breeding.

Examples

Dogs:

  • Pug
  • German Shepherd
  • Labrador

All evolved from wolf-like ancestors.

Significance

Demonstrates how selection can cause evolutionary change.

7. EVIDENCE FROM OBSERVED EVOLUTION

Evolution can be observed directly.

Industrial Melanism

Example

Peppered moth (Biston betularia)

Before industrialization: Light-colored moths dominated.

After industrialization: Dark-colored moths increased.

Reason: Better camouflage on soot-covered trees.

Significance- Direct evidence of natural selection.

Antibiotic Resistance

Bacteria evolve resistance against antibiotics.

Examples:

  • Drug-resistant tuberculosis
  • MRSA strains

Significance

Evolution occurring in real time.

Adaptive Radiation

Definition

Evolution of multiple species from a common ancestor in a geographical area.

Example

Darwin's Finches- One ancestral finch evolved into many species with different beaks.

Example in Australia

Marsupials diversified into many forms.

Modern Synthetic Theory of Evolution

Also called: Neo-Darwinism

Combines:

  • Darwin's natural selection
  • Mendelian genetics
  • Population genetics

Major Forces

  1. Mutation
  2. Recombination
  3. Gene flow
  4. Genetic drift
  5. Natural selection

SUMMARY TABLE: EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION

Evidence

Example

Significance

Fossils

Archaeopteryx

Transitional forms

Homologous organs

Human and whale forelimbs

Common ancestry

Analogous organs

Bird and butterfly wings

Convergent evolution

Vestigial organs

Appendix

Ancestral remnants

Embryology

Vertebrate embryos

Common origin

Molecular biology

DNA similarities

Genetic relationship

Biogeography

Darwin's finches

Geographic isolation

Natural selection

Peppered moth

Evolution in action

 

High-Yield Facts

·       Oparin and Haldane proposed chemical evolution.

·       Miller and Urey experimentally supported chemical evolution.

·       Primitive atmosphere contained CH₄, NH₃, H₂ and H₂O vapour.

·       Homologous organs → Divergent evolution.

·       Analogous organs → Convergent evolution.

·       Archaeopteryx is a connecting link between reptiles and birds.

·       Fossils are strongest direct evidence of evolution.

·       Cytochrome-c and DNA comparisons provide molecular evidence.

·       Darwin's finches demonstrate adaptive radiation.

·       Industrial melanism is a classic example of natural selection.

One-Line Revision

Origin of life is best explained by Oparin-Haldane's chemical evolution theory, experimentally supported by the Miller-Urey experiment, while evolution is supported by fossil, anatomical, embryological, molecular, biogeographical, and direct observational evidence demonstrating that all life shares common ancestry and has changed over time.

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