In March 2015,
NASA Ames scientists reported that, for the first time, complex
DNA and
RNA organic compounds of
life, including
uracil,
cytosine and
thymine, have been formed in the laboratory under
outer space conditions, using starting chemicals, such as pyrimidine, found in
meteorites. Pyrimidine, like
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), the most carbon-rich chemical found in the
universe, may have been formed in
red giants or in
interstellar dust and gas clouds.
Prebiotic synthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides In order to understand how
life arose, knowledge is required of the chemical pathways that permit formation of the key building blocks of life under plausible
prebiotic conditions. The
RNA world hypothesis holds that in the
primordial soup there existed free-floating
ribonucleotides, the fundamental molecules that combine in series to form
RNA. Complex molecules such as RNA must have emerged from relatively small molecules whose reactivity was governed by physico-chemical processes. RNA is composed of pyrimidine and
purine nucleotides, both of which are necessary for reliable information transfer, and thus natural selection and Darwinian
evolution. Becker et al. showed how pyrimidine
nucleosides can be synthesized from small molecules and
ribose, driven solely by wet-dry cycles. Purine nucleosides can be synthesized by a similar pathway. 5’-mono-and diphosphates also form selectively from phosphate-containing minerals, allowing concurrent formation of
polyribonucleotides with both the pyrimidine and purine bases. Thus a reaction network towards the pyrimidine and purine RNA building blocks can be established starting from simple atmospheric or volcanic molecules. == See also ==