4.1 Article

Oxaloacetate-to-malate conversion by mineral photoelectrochemistry: implications for the viability of the reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle in prebiotic chemistry

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ASTROBIOLOGY
Volume 7, Issue 3-4, Pages 271-278

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1473550408004291

Keywords

origin of life; photoelectrochemistry; prebiotic chemistry; reductive citric acid cycle; tricarboxylic acid cycle; zinc sulphide

Funding

  1. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NNX07AU97G]

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The carboxylic acids produced by the reductive tricarboxylic acid (rTCA) cycle are possibly a biosynthetic core of initial life, although several Steps Such as the reductive kinetics of oxaloacetate (OAA) to malate (MA) are problematic by conventional chemical routes. In this context, we studied the kinetics of this reaction as promoted by ZnS mineral photoelectrochemistry. The quantum efficiency MA of MA production from the photoelectrochemical reduction of OAA followed phi(MA) = 0.13 [OAA] (2.1 x 10(-3) + [OAA])(-1) and was independent of temperature (5 to 50 degrees C). To evaluate the importance or this forward rate under a prebiotic scenario, we also Studied the temperature-dependent rate of the backward thermal decarboxylation of OAA to pyruvatc (PA), which followed an Arrhenius behavior as log (k(-2))= 11.74-4956/T, where k(-2) is in units of s(-1). These measured rates were employed in conjunction with the indirectly estimated carboxylation rate of PA to OAA to assess the possible importance of mineral photoelectrochemistry in the conversion of OAA to MA under several scenarios of prebiotic conditions oil early Earth. As an example, our analysis shows that there is 90% efficiency with a forward velocity of 3 yr/cycle for the OAA -> M A step of the rTCA cycle at 280 K. Efficiency and velocity both decrease for increasing temperature. These results suggest high viability for mineral photoelectrochemistry as an enzyme-free engine to drive the rTCA cycle through the early aeons of early Earth, at least for the investigated OAA -> MA step.

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