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A Search for Extraterrestrial Amino Acids in Carbonaceous Antarctic Micrometeorites

  • Published: October 1998
  • Volume 28, pages 413–424, (1998)
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Origins of life and evolution of the biosphere Aims and scope Submit manuscript
A Search for Extraterrestrial Amino Acids in Carbonaceous Antarctic Micrometeorites
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  • Karen L. F. Brinton1,
  • Cécile Engrand2,3,
  • Daniel P. Glavin1,
  • Jeffrey L. Bada1 &
  • …
  • Michel Maurette2 
  • 232 Accesses

  • 76 Citations

  • Explore all metrics

Abstract

Antarctic micrometeorites (AMMs) in the 100–400 μm size range are the dominant mass fraction of extraterrestrial material accreted by the Earth today. A high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) based technique exploited at the limits of sensitivity has been used to search for the extraterrestrial amino acids α-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB) and isovaline in AMMs. Five samples, each containing about 30 to 35 grains, were analyzed. All the samples possess a terrestrial amino acid component, indicated by the excess of the L-enantiomers of common protein amino acids. In only one sample (A91) was AIB found to be present at a level significantly above the background blanks. The concentration of AIB (∼280 ppm), and the AIB/isovaline ratio (≥10), in this sample are both much higher than in CM chondrites. The apparently large variation in the AIB concentrations of the samples suggests that AIB may be concentrated in rare subset of micrometeorites. Because the AIB/isovaline ratio in sample A91 is much larger than in CM chondrites, the synthesis of amino acids in the micrometeorite parent bodies might have involved a different process requiring an HCN-rich environment, such as that found in comets. If the present day characteristics of the meteorite and micrometeorite fluxes can be extrapolated back in time, then the flux of large carbonaceous micrometeorites could have contributed to the inventory of prebiotic molecules on the early Earth.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. The Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California at San Diego, CA, 92093, U.S.A.

    Karen L. F. Brinton, Daniel P. Glavin & Jeffrey L. Bada

  2. C.S.N.S.M., Batîment 104, 91405, Campus-Orsay, France

    Cécile Engrand & Michel Maurette

  3. Mineralogische Abteilung, Naturhistorisches Museum, Postfach 417, Vienna, Austria

    Cécile Engrand

Authors
  1. Karen L. F. Brinton
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  2. Cécile Engrand
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  3. Daniel P. Glavin
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  4. Jeffrey L. Bada
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  5. Michel Maurette
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Brinton, K.L.F., Engrand, C., Glavin, D.P. et al. A Search for Extraterrestrial Amino Acids in Carbonaceous Antarctic Micrometeorites. Orig Life Evol Biosph 28, 413–424 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1006548905523

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  • Issue Date: October 1998

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1006548905523

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Keywords

  • High Performance Liquid Chromatography
  • High Performance Liquid Chromatography
  • Protein Amino Acid
  • Acid Component
  • Parent Body
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