4.8 Article

Thermal formation of homochiral serine clusters and implications for the origin of homochirality

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 128, Issue 51, Pages 17074-17086

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja064617d

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Spontaneous assembly of amino acids into vapor-phase clusters occurs on heating the solid compounds in air. In comparison to the other amino acids, serine forms clusters to an unusual extent, showing a magic number octamer on sublimation; this octamer can be ionized and characterized by mass spectrometry. Two isomers of the vapor-phase serine octamer are generated, the minor one at 130 degrees C and the major at 220 degrees C. The higher temperature cluster shows a strong homochiral preference, as confirmed by isotopic labeling experiments. This serine cluster, like that generated earlier from solution in electrospray ionization experiments, undergoes gas-phase enantioselective substitution reactions with other amino acids. These reactions transfer the chirality of serine to the other amino acid through enantioselective incorporation into the octamer. Other serine pyrolysis products include alanine, glycine, ethanolamine, and small dipeptides, and many of these, too, are observed to be incorporated into the thermally formed serine octamers. Chiral chromatographic analysis confirmed that L-serine sublimation produced DL-alanine, glycine, and ethanolamine, while in the presence of hydrogen sulfide, L-serine yielded L-cysteine. The data demonstrate that sublimation of serine under relatively mild conditions yields chirally enriched serine octamers and that the chiral preference of the starting serine can be transferred to other compounds through cluster-forming chemical reactions.

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