4.1 Article

Histidine Self-assembly and Stability on Mineral Surfaces as a Model of Prebiotic Chemical Evolution: An Experimental and Computational Approach

Journal

ORIGINS OF LIFE AND EVOLUTION OF BIOSPHERES
Volume 51, Issue 2, Pages 117-130

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11084-021-09606-3

Keywords

Prebiotic synthesis; Organic catalyst; Peptide bond; Infrared spectroscopy; Differential scanning calorimetry; Molecular dynamics

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Funding

  1. [UNAM-DGAPA-PAPIIT-IN210119]

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The abiotic synthesis of histidine under experimental prebiotic conditions has been proven to be chemically promising and plausible. The results of experimental and computational studies suggest that mineral surfaces play a crucial role in the stabilization and self-assembly of histidine, enhancing organic stability in prebiotic chemical evolution.
The abiotic synthesis of histidine under experimental prebiotic conditions has proven to be chemically promising and plausible. Within this context, the present results suggest that histidine amino acid may function as a simple prebiotic catalyst able to enhance amino acid polymerization. This work describes an experimental and computational approach to the self-assembly and stabilization of DL-histidine on mineral surfaces using antigorite ((Mg, Fe)(3)Si2O5(OH)(4)), pyrite (FeS2), and aragonite (CaCO3) as representative minerals of prebiotic scenarios, such as meteorites, and subaerial and submarine hydrothermal systems. Experimental results were obtained through polarized-light microscopy, IR spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR), and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Molecular dynamics was performed through computational simulations with the MM + method in HyperChem software. IR spectra suggest the presence of peptide bonds in the antigorite-histidine and aragonite-histidine assemblages with the presence of amide I and amide II vibration bands. The FTIR second derivative inspection supports this observation. Moreover, DSC data shows histidine stabilization in the presence of antigorite and aragonite by changes in histidine thermodynamic properties, particularly an increase in histidine decomposition temperature (272oC in antigorite and 275oC in aragonite). Results from molecular dynamics are consistent with DSC data, suggesting an antigorite-histidine closer interaction with decreased molecular distances (cca. 5.5 angstrom) between the amino acid and the crystal surface. On the whole, the experimental and computational outcomes support the role of mineral surfaces in prebiotic chemical evolution as enhancers of organic stability.

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