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    Home»Chemistry»Tracing the Origin of Life – Researchers Uncover How Primordial Proteins Formed on Prebiotic Earth
    Chemistry

    Tracing the Origin of Life – Researchers Uncover How Primordial Proteins Formed on Prebiotic Earth

    By Tohoku UniversityJuly 17, 20231 Comment2 Mins Read
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    Abstract Biochemistry Origin of life Concept
    Scientists at Tohoku University discovered that boric acid catalyzes the formation of lengthy peptides under neutral and acidic conditions, countering previous theories that alkaline conditions were ideal. The discovery of abundant boron-containing minerals in ancient earth rocks further supports the potential of boron-rich, neutral environments for protein synthesis on prebiotic Earth.

    A new study suggests boric acid facilitated early peptide formation in neutral environments, supporting theories that coastal regions played a crucial role in life’s origins.

    Unraveling the mystery of how catalytic organic polymers first appeared on prebiotic Earth will unlock key understandings in the origin of life.

    Researchers from Tohoku University recently discovered a probable setting where the creation of catalytic organic polymers could occur. To make this discovery, they evaporated solutions of amino acids that contained boric acid and found that boric acid fosters the creation of polypeptides in both neutral and acidic environments. The longest peptides formed in the experiments were 39 monomer-long glycine polypeptides under a neutral condition.

    Previous studies have suggested that highly alkaline evaporative environments served as the place for ancient protein synthesis, yielding up to 20 monomer-long glycine peptides. Neutral conditions were thought to be the worst-case in regards to peptide synthesis.

    Ancient Coastal Area Rich in Boron Could Catalyze the Polymerization of Amino Acids
    An ancient coastal area rich in boron could catalyze the polymerization of amino acids. Credit: Yoshihiro Furukawa

    Boron-containing minerals have been discovered abundantly in some of the oldest sedimentary-origin rocks found on earth, dating back 3.8 billions-years. These findings suggest that coastal areas of ancient small continents and islands rich in boric acid spontaneously assembled amino acids, forming polypeptides and proto-proteins.

    “The formation of polypeptides in neutral environments have important meanings in the chemical evolution of the origin of life,” says lead author Yoshihiro Furukawa, an associate professor at Tohoku University.

    Whilst RNAs are rather stable under neutral conditions, they are extremely unstable under alkaline conditions. Boron has been known to help many steps in abiotic ribonucleotide synthesis.

    “Boron-rich neutral evaporative environments serve as an ideal place for the formations and interactions between the two essential polymers on prebiotic Earth,” Furukawa says.

    This research group is now investigating which amino acids are incorporated in the proto-peptides in this environment.

    Reference: “Boron-assisted abiotic polypeptide synthesis” by Yuki Sumie, Keiichiro Sato, Takeshi Kakegawa and Yoshihiro Furukawa, 11 May 2023, Communications Chemistry.
    DOI: 10.1038/s42004-023-00885-7

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    1 Comment

    1. Billy on July 18, 2023 6:07 pm

      Let me step back and laugh out loud

      Reply
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