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Published October 28, 2024 | Published
Journal Article Open

Glycine synthesis from nitrate and glyoxylate mediated by ferroan brucite: An integrated pathway for prebiotic amine synthesis

  • 1. ROR icon University of Colorado Boulder
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Amino acids are present in all known life, so identifying the environmental conditions under which they can be synthesized constrains where life on Earth might have formed and where life might be found on other planetary bodies. All known abiotic amino acid syntheses require ammonia, which is only produced in reducing and neutral atmospheres. Here, we demonstrate that the Fe-bearing hydroxide mineral ferroan brucite [Fe_(0.33),Mg_(0.67)(OH)₂] can mediate the reaction of nitrate and glyoxylate to form glycine, the simplest amino acid used in life. Up to 97% of this glycine was detected only after acid digestion of the mineral, demonstrating that it had been strongly partitioned to the mineral. The dicarboxylic amino acid 3-hydroxy aspartate was also detected, which suggests that reactants underwent a mechanism that simultaneously produced mono- and dicarboxylic amino acids. Nitrate can be produced in both neutral and oxidizing atmospheres, so reductive amination of nitrate and glyoxylate on a ferroan brucite surface expands origins of life scenarios. First, it expands the environmental conditions in which life's precursors could form to include oxidizing atmospheres. Second, it demonstrates the ability of ferroan brucite, an abundant, secondary mineral in serpentinizing systems where olivine is partly hydrated, to mediate reductive amination. Finally, the results demonstrate the need to consider mineral-bound products when analyzing samples for abiotic amino acid synthesis.

Copyright and License

© 2024 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. This article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0(CC BY-NC-ND).

Acknowledgement

This work was supported with funding from the Simons Foundation Collaboration on the Origin of Life (SCOL) to Alexis Templeton. We thank David VanderVelde at the Caltech Catalysis Center, John Eiler, and Victoria Orphan for providing access to NMR, Orbitrap GC-MS, and the anaerobic chamber.

Contributions

L.C. and A.S.T. designed research; L.C. and E.H. performed research; L.C. and A.S. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; L.C. analyzed data; A.S. and A.S.T. aided with interpretation of results; and L.C. wrote the paper.

Data Availability

All study data are included in the article, SI Appendix, and the OSF Database (https://osf.io/fexyj/). The database contains raw files for GC-MS, LC-MS, IC, XRD, and NMR in addition to spectra for Raman, FTIR, and XRD (30).

Supplemental Material

Supporting Information:

Appendix 01 (PDF)

Files

chimiak-et-al-2024-glycine-synthesis-from-nitrate-and-glyoxylate-mediated-by-ferroan-brucite-an-integrated-pathway-for.pdf

Additional details

Created:
October 29, 2024
Modified:
October 29, 2024