Abstract

Abstract The abiogenic photochemical synthesis of complex biochemical compounds on the surface of small bodies in our Solar system was examined. Hydrated minerals are found within a chondrite matrix of meteorites together with significant amounts of organic matter. Clays are likely to have formed when water was present on parent meteoritic bodies. In order to verify the existence of a relationship between abiogenic synthesis of nucleotides and inorganic components of the meteorites, we have investigated possible abiogenic reactions associated with different clay (montmorillonite, kaolinite) and a basaltic one (Tyatya’s volcanic ash) under action of open space energy sources as a model of different exobiological environments on the surface of small space bodies. The abiogenic synthesis of natural adenine nucleotides from a mixture of adenosine and inorganic phosphate has been observed following irradiation with VUV light in the presence of different mineral samples. The yields of the products (5′AMP, 2′AMP, 3′AMP, 2′3′cAMP and 3′5′cAMP) depended on irradiation time and kinds of minerals used. The discovery that meteoritic organic compounds may be trapped and protected within a clay mineral matrix has implications for our understanding of prebiotic molecular evolution in the early Solar system. Clay minerals may also have concentrated organic compounds thereby promoting polymerization reactions. An adsorption/binding of nucleic acids components by clay crystals could change the electron distribution and/or the conformation of the molecules. The remnant water molecules in the clay sheets also could influence the course of the reaction. Clay immobilization of phosphate could play an important role in this reaction. Chondritic material could have been a common component of the inner Solar system shortly after its formation and the biologically useful products of clay mineral–organic matter interactions could have also widespread, and delivered to planetary surfaces through the accretion of carbonaceous asteroids.

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