Selective adsorption of l- and d-amino acids on calcite: Implications for biochemical homochirality


Autoria(s): Hazen, Robert M.; Filley, Timothy R.; Goodfriend, Glenn A.
Data(s)

08/05/2001

01/05/2001

Resumo

The emergence of biochemical homochirality was a key step in the origin of life, yet prebiotic mechanisms for chiral separation are not well constrained. Here we demonstrate a geochemically plausible scenario for chiral separation of amino acids by adsorption on mineral surfaces. Crystals of the common rock-forming mineral calcite (CaCO3), when immersed in a racemic aspartic acid solution, display significant adsorption and chiral selectivity of d- and l-enantiomers on pairs of mirror-related crystal-growth surfaces. This selective adsorption is greater on crystals with terraced surface textures, which indicates that d- and l-aspartic acid concentrate along step-like linear growth features. Thus, selective adsorption of linear arrays of d- and l-amino acids on calcite, with subsequent condensation polymerization, represents a plausible geochemical mechanism for the production of homochiral polypeptides on the prebiotic Earth.

Identificador

/pmc/articles/PMC33239/

/pubmed/11331767

http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.101085998

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

The National Academy of Sciences

Direitos

Copyright © 2001, The National Academy of Sciences

Palavras-Chave #Physical Sciences
Tipo

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