Hmmm... advocating a metabolism-first scenario. As you have said, you are an organic chemist so you are probably aware that water is a poor medium for polymerization so to avoid this problem, you advocate metabolism-first. So you believe that a version of the Krebs cycle would form sponetaneously? Orgel said that there is no reason to believe that a mineral surface or the intermediates of the cycle (e.g. citrate, isocitrate, acontate, alpha ketoglutarmate, fumarate, malate, oxaloacetate) would catalyze all of the necessary reactions. Surely one mineral might catalyze one reaction of the citric acid cycle (or the reductive version of it) but I doubt that a mineral could catalyze all of the reactions necessary of the citric acid cycle. Well, if I sound inelegant let Leslie Orgel explain:
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/97/23/12503
I heard you said amino acids could do it... how would they replicate without the information being stored on a nucleic acid. The RNA World scenario provides an answer to this but one must believe in the notion of RNA could act as an efficent polymerase and this has not yet been demonstrated despite numerous valient attempts by
David Bartel and coworkers. Also, lets not forget about the difficulties inheritant in prebiotic nucleotide synthesis. One difficulty is attaching the correct nitrogen atom of the base (9') to the correct carbon atom to the sugar (1'). If it attached to one, it must be in its furnanose (5 vertice ringed form) instead of the pyranose (6 vertice ring.) If it is attached to the 1' carbon of ribose, it must be in its beta anomer not the alpha anomer.