Chemoton: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Howard Arvi Hughes m (Category:CZ Live) |
imported>Matthias Brendel No edit summary |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
Oxford University Press 2003. | Oxford University Press 2003. | ||
[[Category:Biology| ]] | |||
[[Category:CZ Live]] | [[Category:CZ Live]] | ||
[[Category:Biology Workgroup]] | |||
[[Category:Biology Workgroup (Top)]] |
Revision as of 08:47, 7 December 2006
The chemoton is an abstract model for life introduced by Tibor Gánti in 1971. Its aim was to define the minimal modell of a living organism.
A living system:
- Has to be separated from its environment.
- Has to perform metabolism with its environment.
- It must replicate itself.
- It has to have a polimer type subsystem carrying information.
- It must have an autocatalytic system, which is connected to the metabolism and creates the stuff needed to grow its boundary and to replicate its information system.
Such a system may be called alive, since it can live, replicate in its proper environment and it can evolve, since there is an information system.
References
T. Gánti: The principles of life Oxford University Press 2003.