The nucleus is an organelle found in eukaryotic cells. Inside its fully enclosed nuclear membrane, it contains the majority of the cell's genetic material. This material is organized as DNA molecules, along with a variety of proteins, to form chromosomes. Now is an opportune moment to address the confluence of cell biological form and function that is the nucleus. Its arrival is especially timely because the recognition that the nucleus is extremely dynamic has now been solidly established as a paradigm shift over the past two decades, and also because we now see on the horizon numerous ways in which organization itself, including gene location and possibly self-organizing bodies, underlies nuclear functions.
We do not know how and when the genome of an ancestral cell first became encased in a primitive nucleus. We have no evidence that cells living in the RNA world ever had a membrane (or any other structure) around the genome, i.e., that they ever became nucleate. Once a ribozyme RNA replicase arose, anything would have been possible including the emergence of ribozymes with lipid biosynthetic activities.