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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The nature of organic matter in meteorites reveals information about early solar system chemistry and the histories of parent bodies as recorded in the effects of physical and chemical processes that occurred over the past 4.5 billion years. Asteroids and their fragments impact the Earth with approximately 40 million kg of material each year and contributed to the inventory of organics available for the origin of life. Analyses of primitive carbonaceous chondrites over the last five decades have revealed a major insoluble organic component, as well as a complex and highly diverse suite of soluble organic molecules that includes aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons, carboxylic acids, hydroxy acids, N-heterocycles, polyols, amino acids, amines, and many other molecules that have not yet been identified. Thermal and aqueous alteration in primitive asteroids played an important role in the formation and destruction organics, including amplification of L-amino acid and D-sugar acid enantiomeric excesses that may have contributed to the origin of homochirality in life on Earth.
    Keywords: Lunar and Planetary Science and Exploration; Exobiology
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN52799 , Primitive Meteorites and Asteroids; 205-271
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: A key question for the origins of life is understanding which amino acids made up the first proteins synthesized during the origins of life. The canonical set of 20 - 22 amino acids used in proteins are all alpha-amino, alpha-hydrogen isomers that, nevertheless, show considerable variability in properties including size, hydrophobicity, and ionizability. Abiotic amino acid synthesis experiments such as Miller-Urey spark discharge reactions produce a set of up to 23 amino acids, depending on starting materials and reaction conditions, with significant abundances of both alpha- and non-alpha-amino acid isomers. These two sets of amino acids do not completely overlap; of the 23 spark discharge amino acids, only 11 are used in modern proteins. Furthermore, because our understanding of conditions on the early Earth are limited, it is unclear which set(s) of conditions employed in spark discharge or hydrothermal reactions are correct, leaving us with significant uncertainty about the amino acid alphabet available for the origins of life on Earth. Meteorites, the surviving remnants of asteroids and comets that fall to the Earth, offer the potential to study authentic samples of naturally-occurring abiotic chemistry, and thus can provide an alternative approach to constraining the amino acid library during the origins of life.
    Keywords: Lunar and Planetary Science and Exploration; Exobiology
    Type: JSC-CN-33511 , Astrobiology Science Conference 2015 (AbSciCon2015); Jun 15, 2015 - Jun 19, 2015; Chicago, IL; United States
    Format: application/pdf
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