• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

DNA And RNA Bases, “Missing” Building Blocks Of Life On Earth, Found On Meteorites

August 1, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

Long before a space rock brought death on an unprecedented scale to the dinosaurs, smaller counterparts seeded the world with the materials to make life. In the 1960s, meteorites were shown to contain some, but not all, of the nucleobases from which DNA and RNA have formed. Now, the finding of the missing nucleobases in meteorites strengthens the case that the chemistry required to make life possible came from the skies.

The early Earth was a very hostile place, hot enough at times to rip apart the molecules necessary to make life. This raises an obvious question as to where these molecules came from once the planet was cool enough to maintain them, and asteroids and comets are the obvious answer.

Advertisement

The idea gained some support when guanine, adenine, and uracil – all nucleobases that help form nucleic acids including DNA and RNA – were found inside meteorites along with five other nucleobases. These chemicals are necessary, but not sufficient to begin life as it exists on Earth. So the announcement that the missing essential nucleobases cytosine and thymine have been found in meteorites for the first time fills a major gap.

Finding cytosine and thymine in meteorites is not a surprise. Besides the question of how else they could have been present on Earth when required, experiments modeling conditions in outer space suggest both should form there. Nevertheless, the failure to actually find these crucial molecules in space rocks left the nagging question of whether there was something we had missed.

Cytosine and thymine are both classed as pyrimidine nucleobases, formed from a single six-membered nitrogen ring. However, so is uracil, which had been found in meteorites previously. Lead author Professor Yasuhiro Oba of Hokkaido University and co-authors have now found all three in the Murchison, Murray, and Tagish Lake meteorites. The same samples also include structural isomers (molecules with the same atoms but arranged differently) of the pyrimidine nucleobases.

Murchison meteorite

A large piece of the Murchison meteorite, one of the most important meteorites ever found.

The three meteorites were all chosen because they are carbon-rich and collected soon after landing. The Murchison meteorite has been a particular bonanza for scientists, with 96 different amino acids found in it previously. Yet despite the intensity of study it has been subjected to, cytosine and thymine were not detected until now, possibly because the harsher extraction methods used by previous researchers destroyed the more delicate molecules.

Advertisement

Two fragments of the Murchison meteorite produced concentrations of the nucleobases that varied by a factor of 10, indicating it also pays to keep looking if the first sample from a promising meteorite doesn’t have the molecules you seek.

Oba’s team previously demonstrated these nucleobases can form from ices of water, carbon monoxide, methanol, and ammonia under the conditions existing between the stars. Whether this was where they actually came from is just guesswork at this stage, however.

If the molecules for life came from outer space, other planets would be bathed in them too, increasing the chances of life elsewhere in the universe. This conclusion should not be confused with the far more exotic panspermia hypothesis, in which life itself came to Earth from elsewhere.

The study is published in in Nature Communications.

Advertisement

An earlier version of this article was published in April 2022.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer – FIFA backs down on threat to fine Premier clubs who play South American players
  2. U.S. House passes abortion rights bill, outlook poor in Senate
  3. Two children killed in missile strikes on Yemen’s Marib – state news agency
  4. Study Reveals Which Humans Survived The Last Ice Age And Which Didn’t

Source Link: DNA And RNA Bases, "Missing" Building Blocks Of Life On Earth, Found On Meteorites

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • The Man Who Fell From Space: These Are The Last Words Of Cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov
  • How Long Can A Bird Can Fly Without Landing?
  • Earliest Evidence Of Making Fire Has Been Discovered, X-Rays Of 3I/ATLAS Reveal Signature Unseen In Other Interstellar Objects, And Much More This Week
  • Could This Weirdly Moving Comet Have Been The Real “Star Of Bethlehem”?
  • How Monogamous Are Humans Vs. Other Mammals? Somewhere Between Beavers And Meerkats, Apparently
  • A 4,900-Year-Old Tree Called Prometheus Was Once The World’s Oldest. Then, A Scientist Cut It Down
  • Descartes Thought The Pineal Gland Was “The Seat Of The Soul” – And Some People Still Do
  • Want To Know What The Last 2 Minutes Before Being Swallowed By A Volcanic Eruption Look Like? Now You Can
  • The Three Norths Are Moving On: A Once-In-A-Lifetime Alignment Shifts This Weekend
  • Spectacular Photo Captures Two Rare Atmospheric Phenomena At The Same Time
  • How America’s Aerospace Defense Came To Track Santa Claus For 70 Years
  • 3200 Phaethon: Parent Body Of Geminids Meteor Shower Is One Of The Strangest Objects We Know Of
  • Does Sleeping On A Problem Actually Help? Yes – It’s Science-Approved
  • Scientists Find A “Unique Group” Of Polar Bears Evolving To Survive The Modern World
  • Politics May Have Just Killed Our Chances To See A Tom Cruise Movie Actually Shot In Space
  • Why Is The Head On Beer Often White, When Beer Itself Isn’t?
  • Fabric Painted With Dye Made From Bacteria Could Protect Astronauts From Radiation On Moon
  • There Used To Be 27 Letters In The English Alphabet, Until One Mysteriously Vanished
  • Why You Need To Stop Chucking That “Liquid Gold” Down Your Kitchen Sink
  • Youngest Mammoth Fossils Ever Found Turn Out To Be Whales… 400 Kilometers From The Coast
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version