| Literature DB >> 16867193 |
Nils G Holm1, Marion Dumont, Magnus Ivarsson, Cécile Konn.
Abstract
Seawater is constantly circulating through oceanic basement as a low-temperature hydrothermal fluid (<150 degrees C). In cases when ultramafic rocks are exposed to the fluids, for instance during the initial phase of subduction, ferromagnesian minerals are altered in contact with the water, leading to high pH and formation of secondary magnesium hydroxide, among other--brucite, that may scavenge borate and phosphate from seawater. The high pH may promote abiotic formation of pentoses, particularly ribose. Pentoses are stabilized by borate, since cyclic pentoses form a less reactive complex with borate. Analyses have shown that borate occupies the 2' and 3' positions of ribose, thus leaving the 5' position available for reactions like phosphorylation. The purine coding elements (adenine, in particular) of RNA may be formed in the same general hydrothermal environments of the seafloor.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16867193 PMCID: PMC1550712 DOI: 10.1186/1467-4866-7-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geochem Trans ISSN: 1467-4866 Impact factor: 4.737
Figure 1The preferential order of binding of pentoses to boron is ribose>lyxose>arabinose>xylose. Reprinted with permission from Li et al. [33]. Copyright 2005 American Chemical Society.
Figure 2Dissolved nitrate concentrations in sediment pore fluids at open-ocean ODP Sites 1225 and 1231. The nitrate values show that fresh seawater is channelled upwards into deep-sea sediments via the rocks underneath (from D'Hondt et al., 2003 [59]).