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UV photostability of three 2-aminoazoles with key roles in prebiotic chemistry on the early earth.


ABSTRACT: Three related molecules in the 2-aminoazole family are potentially important for prebiotic chemistry: 2-aminooxazole, 2-aminoimidazole, and 2-aminothiazole, which can provide critical functions as an intermediate in nucleotide synthesis, a nucleotide activating agent, and a selective agent, respectively. Here, we examine the wavelength-dependent photodegradation of these three molecules under mid-range UV light (210-290 nm). We then assess the implications of the observed degradation rates for the proposed prebiotic roles of these compounds. We find that all three 2-aminoazoles degrade under UV light, with half lives ranging from ≈7-100 hours under a solar-like spectrum. 2-Aminooxazole is the least photostable, while 2-aminoimidazole is the most photostable. The relative photostabilities are consistent with the order in which these molecules would be used prebiotically: AO is used first to build nucleotides and AI is used last to activate them.

SUBMITTER: Todd ZR 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9631353 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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UV photostability of three 2-aminoazoles with key roles in prebiotic chemistry on the early earth.

Todd Zoe R ZR   Szabla Rafał R   Szostak Jack W JW   Sasselov Dimitar D DD  

Chemical communications (Cambridge, England) 20190801 70


Three related molecules in the 2-aminoazole family are potentially important for prebiotic chemistry: 2-aminooxazole, 2-aminoimidazole, and 2-aminothiazole, which can provide critical functions as an intermediate in nucleotide synthesis, a nucleotide activating agent, and a selective agent, respectively. Here, we examine the wavelength-dependent photodegradation of these three molecules under mid-range UV light (210-290 nm). We then assess the implications of the observed degradation rates for t  ...[more]

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