How life originated on Earth? Scientists create artificial comet to decode
London: Scientists have for the first time shown that one of the
building blocks of genetic material in living organisms may have
formed in cometary ices, suggesting that comets could be source of
the organic molecules that made life possible on Earth. To obtain this
result, scientists at the National Centre for Scientific Research in
France (CNRS) created an artificial comet and carried out a highly
detailed analysis. They propose the first realistic scenario for the
formation of this key compound, which had never been detected in
meteorites or cometary ices until now.
The genetic material of all living organisms on Earth, as well as of
viruses, is made up of nucleic acids, DNA and RNA. RNA, which is
considered more primitive, is thought to have been one of the first
molecules characteristic of life to appear on Earth. Scientists have long
wondered about the origin of these biological compounds. Some of
them believe that the Earth was seeded by comets or asteroids that
contained the basic building blocks needed to form such molecules.
Several amino acids (the components of proteins) and nitrogenous
bases (one of the components of nucleic acids) have already been
found in meteorites, as well as in artificial comets produced in the
laboratory. However, ribose, the other key component of RNA, had
never yet been detected in extraterrestrial material or created in the
laboratory under ‘astrophysical’ conditions. By simulating the
evolution of the interstellar ice making up comets, researchers
successfully obtained ribose, a key step in understanding the origin of
RNA - and therefore of life.
As a first step, an artificial comet was produced. By placing a
representative mixture of water (H2O), methanol (CH3OH) and
ammonia (NH3) in a high vacuum chamber at minus 200 degrees
Celsius, the researchers simulated the formation of dust grains coated
with ice, the raw material of comets. This material was irradiated with
UV, as in the molecular clouds where these grains form. The sample
was then warmed to room temperature, as in comets when they
approach the Sun.
Its composition was analysed, optimising an extremely sensitive and
accurate method (multidimensional gas chromatography coupled with
time-of-flight mass spectrometry). Several sugars were detected,
including ribose. Their diversity and relative abundances suggest that
they were formed from formaldehyde (a molecule found in space and
on comets that forms in large quantities from methanol and water).
Although the existence of ribose in real comets remains to be
confirmed, this discovery completes the list of the molecular building
blocks of life that can be formed in interstellar ice. It also lends
further support to the theory that comets are the source of the
organic molecules that made life possible on Earth, and perhaps
elsewhere in the universe. The study was published in the journal
Science.
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