Home
Scholarly Works
A Thermodynamic Basis for Prebiotic Amino Acid...
Journal article

A Thermodynamic Basis for Prebiotic Amino Acid Synthesis and the Nature of the First Genetic Code

Abstract

Of the 20 amino acids used in proteins, 10 were formed in Miller's atmospheric discharge experiments. The two other major proposed sources of prebiotic amino acid synthesis include formation in hydrothermal vents and delivery to Earth via meteorites. We combine observational and experimental data of amino acid frequencies formed by these diverse mechanisms and show that, regardless of the source, these 10 early amino acids can be ranked in order of decreasing abundance in prebiotic contexts. This order can be predicted by thermodynamics. The relative abundances of the early amino acids were most likely reflected in the composition of the first proteins at the time the genetic code originated. The remaining amino acids were incorporated into proteins after pathways for their biochemical synthesis evolved. This is consistent with theories of the evolution of the genetic code by stepwise addition of new amino acids. These are hints that key aspects of early biochemistry may be universal.

Authors

Higgs PG; Pudritz RE

Journal

Astrobiology, Vol. 9, No. 5, pp. 483–490

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

June 1, 2009

DOI

10.1089/ast.2008.0280

ISSN

1531-1074

Contact the Experts team