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NASA
Scientists Find Clues to a Secret of Life
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
NASA
scientists analyzing the dust of meteorites have discovered new
clues to a long-standing mystery about how life works on its most
basic, molecular level.
"We found more support for
the idea that biological molecules, like amino acids, created in
space and brought to Earth by meteorite impacts help explain why
life is left-handed," said Dr. Daniel Glavin of NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "By that I
mean why all known life uses only left-handed versions of amino
acids to build proteins." Glavin is lead author of a paper
on this research appearing in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences March 16.
Proteins are the workhorse
molecules of life, used in everything from structures like hair
to enzymes, the catalysts that speed up or regulate chemical
reactions. Just as the 26 letters of the alphabet are arranged in
limitless combinations to make words, life uses 20 different
amino acids in a huge variety of arrangements to build millions
of different proteins. Amino acid molecules can be built in two
ways that are mirror images of each other, like your hands.
Although life based on right-handed amino acids would presumably
work fine, "you can't mix them," says Dr. Jason Dworkin
of NASA Goddard, co-author of the study. "If you do, life
turns to something resembling scrambled eggs -- it's a mess.
Since life doesn't work with a mixture of left-handed and
right-handed amino acids, the mystery is: how did life decide --
what made life choose left-handed amino acids over right-handed
ones?"
Over the last four years, the team carefully
analyzed samples of meteorites with an abundance of carbon,
called carbonaceous chondrites. The researchers looked for the
amino acid isovaline and discovered that three types of
carbonaceous meteorites had more of the left-handed version than
the right-handed variety – as much as a record 18 percent
more in the often-studied Murchison meteorite. "Finding more
left-handed isovaline in a variety of meteorites supports the
theory that amino acids brought to the early Earth by asteroids
and comets contributed to the origin of only left-handed based
protein life on Earth," said Glavin.
All amino acids
can switch from left-handed to right, or the reverse, by chemical
reactions energized with radiation or temperature, according to
the team. The scientists looked for isovaline because it has the
ability to preserve its handedness for billions of years, and it
is extremely rarely used by life, so its presence in meteorites
is unlikely to be from contamination by terrestrial life. "The
meteorites we studied are from before Earth formed, over 4.5
billion years ago," said Glavin. "We believe the same
process that created extra left-handed isovaline would have
created more left-handed versions of the other amino acids found
in these meteorites, but the bias toward left-handed versions has
been mostly erased after all this time."
The team's
discovery validates and extends the research first reported a
decade ago by Drs. John Cronin and Sandra Pizzarello of Arizona
State University, who were first to discover excess isovaline in
the Murchison meteorite, believed to be a piece of an asteroid.
"We used a different technique to find the excess, and
discovered it for the first time in the Orgueil meteorite, which
belongs to another meteorite group believed to be from an extinct
comet," said Glavin.
The team also found a pattern
to the excess. Different types of meteorites had different
amounts of water, as determined by the clays and water-bearing
minerals found in the meteorites. The team discovered meteorites
with more water also had greater amounts of left-handed
isovaline. "This gives us a hint that the creation of extra
left-handed amino acids had something to do with alteration by
water," said Dworkin. "Since there are many ways to
make extra left-handed amino acids, this discovery considerably
narrows down the search."
If the bias toward
left-handedness originated in space, it makes the search for
extraterrestrial life in our solar system more difficult, while
also making its origin a bit more likely, according to the team.
"If we find life anywhere else in our solar system, it will
probably be microscopic, since microbes can survive in extreme
environments," said Dworkin. "One of the biggest
problems in determining if microscopic life is truly
extra-terrestrial is making sure the sample wasn't contaminated
by microbes brought from Earth. If we find the life is based on
right-handed amino acids, then we know for sure it isn't from
Earth. However, if the bias toward left-handed amino acids began
in space, it likely extends across the solar system, so any life
we may find on Mars, for example, will also be left-handed. On
the other hand, if there is a mechanism to choose handedness
before life emerges, it is one less problem prebiotic chemistry
has to solve before making life. If it was solved for Earth, it
probably has been solved for the other places in our solar system
where the recipe for life might exist, such as beneath the
surface of Mars, or in potential oceans under the icy crust of
Europa and Enceladus, or on Titan."
The research was
funded by the NASA Astrobiology Institute, the NASA
Cosmochemistry program, and the NASA Astrobiology: Exobiology,
and Evolutionary Biology program.
Image Caption: This artist's
concept uses hands to illustrate the left and right-handed
versions of the amino acid isovaline.
Image Credit: NASA / Mary Pat
Hrybyk-Keith
Source: NASA / Goddard Space
Flight Center / Bill Steigerwald
Permalink:
http://www.sflorg.com/comm_center/nasa/p886_17.html
Time Stamp: 3/18/2009 at
4:24:23 AM UTC
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