Ozturk S Furkan, Sasselov Dimitar D
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA 02138.
King's College, Cambridge CB2 1ST, United Kingdom.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Aug 26;122(34):e2505126122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2505126122. Epub 2025 Aug 19.
For centuries, scientists have been puzzled by the mystery of life's biomolecular homochirality-the single-handedness of biological compounds. Sugars and nucleic acids are right-handed, while amino acids are left-handed in biological systems. Likewise, certain metabolites are homochiral, though their handedness varies. However, efforts to address the homochirality problem have often focused on a single compound, a single molecular class, or invoke an extraterrestrial origin. Here, we emphasize the importance of achieving homochirality across an entire prebiotic chemical network and explore a terrestrial pathway for its emergence. This pathway is supported by recent experimental results from several independent studies, as well as analyses of pristine asteroid materials. Our analysis identifies the genome as a key site for achieving network-scale homochirality on early Earth and addresses the opposite handedness of -nucleic acids and -peptides in biology through nonenzymatic, stereoselective coded peptide synthesis.
几个世纪以来,科学家们一直对生命生物分子同手性之谜感到困惑,即生物化合物的单手性。在生物系统中,糖类和核酸是右旋的,而氨基酸是左旋的。同样,某些代谢物也是同手性的,尽管它们的手性各不相同。然而,解决同手性问题的努力往往集中在单一化合物、单一分子类别上,或者援引外星起源。在这里,我们强调在整个前生物化学网络中实现同手性的重要性,并探索其出现的地球途径。这条途径得到了几项独立研究的最新实验结果以及原始小行星物质分析的支持。我们的分析将基因组确定为在早期地球上实现网络规模同手性的关键位点,并通过非酶促、立体选择性编码肽合成解决了生物学中核酸和肽相反手性的问题。