In older literature, adenine was sometimes called
Vitamin B4, but is no longer considered a vitamin. Adenine can be prepared from
ammonia and
hydrogen cyanide (HCN) in aqueous solution, a process that has implications for the
origin of life on
Earth. On August 8, 2011, a report, based on
NASA studies with
meteorites found on
Earth, was published suggesting building blocks of
DNA and
RNA (adenine,
guanine and related
organic molecules) may have been formed extraterrestrially in
outer space. In 2011, physicists reported that adenine has an "unexpectedly variable range of ionization energies along its reaction pathways" which suggested that "understanding experimental data on how adenine survives exposure to
UV light is much more complicated than previously thought"; these findings have implications for
spectroscopic measurements of
heterocyclic compounds, according to one report. == Notes ==