NASA
RESEARCH SHOWS DNA BUILDING BLOCKS CAN BE MADE IN SPACE
From
NASA
Aug.
8, 2011
Scientists
have detected the building blocks of DNA in meteorites since the 1960s, but
were unsure whether they were created in space or resulted from contamination
by terrestrial life. The latest research indicates certain nucleobases -- the
building blocks of our genetic material -- reach the Earth on meteorites in
greater diversity and quantity than previously thought. The discovery adds to a
growing body of evidence that the chemistry inside asteroids and comets is
capable of making building blocks of essential biological molecules.
Previously, scientists found amino acids in samples of comet Wild 2 from NASA's
Stardust mission and in various carbon-rich meteorites. Amino acids are used to
make proteins, the workhorse molecules of life. Proteins are used in everything
from structures such as hair to enzymes, which are the catalysts that speed up
or regulate chemical reactions.
The
findings will be published in the online edition of the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences. In the new work, scientists analyzed samples of
12 carbon-rich meteorites, nine of which were recovered from Antarctica .
The team found adenine and guanine, which are components of DNA nucleobases.
Also, in two of the meteorites, the team discovered for the first time trace
amounts of three molecules related to nucleobases that almost never are used in
biology. These nucleobase-related molecules, called nucleobase analogs, provide
the first evidence that the compounds in the meteorites came from space and not
terrestrial contamination.
"You
would not expect to see these nucleobase analogs if contamination from
terrestrial life was the source, because they're not used in biology,"
said Michael Callahan, astrobiologist and lead author of the paper from NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "However, if asteroids are
behaving like chemical 'factories' cranking out prebiotic material, you would
expect them to produce many variants of nucleobases, not just the biological
ones, because of the wide variety of ingredients and conditions in each
asteroid."
Additional
evidence came from research to further rule out the possibility of terrestrial
contamination as a source of these molecules. The team analyzed an
eight-kilogram (21.4-pound) sample of ice from Antarctica ,
where most of the meteorites in the study were found. The amounts of
nucleobases found in the ice were much lower than in the meteorites. More
significantly, none of the nucleobase analogs were detected in the ice sample.
The team also analyzed a soil sample collected near one of the non-Antarctic
meteorite's fall site. As with the ice sample, the soil sample had none of the
nucleobase analog molecules present in the meteorite.
Launched
in Feb. 7, 1999, Stardust flew past an asteroid and traveled halfway to Jupiter
to collect particle samples from the comet Wild 2. The
spacecraft returned to Earth's vicinity to drop off a sample-return capsule on
January 15, 2006. The research was funded by NASA's Astrobiology Institute at
the agency's Ames Research Laboratory in Moffett Field
Calif. , and the Goddard
Center for Astrobiology in Greenbelt , Md. ; the NASA
Astrobiology Exobiology and Evolutionary Biology Program and the NASA
Postdoctoral Program at the agency's Headquarters in Washington .
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