Astrobiology: Life in the Universe

NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI)


  1. Seminar Detail

    Southpaw Solar System:  L-Amino Acid Excesses in Meteorites and the Implications for the Origin of Homochirality on Earth

    Southpaw Solar System: L-Amino Acid Excesses in Meteorites and the Implications for the Origin of Homochirality on Earth

    Presenter: Daniel Glavin (Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC), with Jason Dworkin, NASA GSFC)

    October 5, 2009 11:00 AM Pacific

    Meteorites provide a record of the chemical processes that occurred in the early solar system before life began on Earth. The delivery of organic matter, including amino acids, by carbonaceous meteorites could have been an important source of the early Earth's prebiotic organic inventory. The earlier discovery of slight to significant excesses for several indigenous left handed α-methyl amino acids, including isovaline, in the CM2 type carbonaceous meteorites Murchison and Murray by Pizzarello and co-workers could point toward a possible prebiotic contribution to the origin of biological homochirality in life on Earth. In order to expand the search for chiral excess in meteorites, we measured the distribution and handedness of the five-carbon amino acids (including isovaline) in nine CI, CM, and CR type carbonaceous meteorites using a highly sensitive liquid chromatography time of flight mass spectrometry technique. Large excesses of L-isovaline were found in several aqueously altered meteorites, but not in the most primitive unaltered CR2 meteorites. These findings are inconsistent with UV-circularly polarized light as the primary mechanism for L-isovaline enrichment and indicate that amplification of a small initial imbalance occurred during an extended aqueous alteration phase on the meteorite parent bodies. The fact that only L-amino acid excesses have been found in meteorites analyzed so far (no D-excesses) may indicate that the origin of life on Earth and possibly elsewhere in our solar system was biased toward L-amino acids from the very beginning.

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The Director’s Seminar series features talks from scientists who are invited by the NAI Director to present their research results to the community. A primary goal of the seminars is to encourage interdisciplinary collaboration across NAI teams and within the astrobiology community at large.

Team Overview Seminars describe the work of the fourteen NAI teams and NAI Central. They offer an opportunity to find out more about the science, E/PO and other activities being performed by the NAI teams and the NAI Central office.

The Forum for Astrobiology Research (FAR) provides an opportunity for graduate students to present their research results and to meet as a student community for networking and mutual support.

The University of Washington seminar series is hosted by the NAI Virtual Planetary Lab (VPL) team from the UW campus in Seattle.