Literature DB >> 17120121

Protocell-like microspheres from thermal polyaspartic acid.

Peter R Bahn1, Aristotel Pappelis, John Bozzola.   

Abstract

One of the most prominent amino acids to appear in monomer-generating origin-of-life experiments is aspartic acid. Hugo Schiff found in 1897 that aspartic acid polymerizes when heated to form polyaspartylimide which hydrolyzes in basic aqueous solution to form thermal polyaspartic acid which is a branched polypeptide. We recently reported at the ISSOL 2005 Conference that commercially made thermal polyaspartic acid forms microspheres when heated in boiling water and allowed to cool. In a new experiment we heated aspartic acid at 180 degrees C for up to 100 h to form thermal polyaspartylimide which when heated in boiling water without addition of base hydrolyzed to form thermal polyaspartic acid which upon cooling formed microspheres. Thermal polyaspartic acid microspheres appear protocell-like in the sense of being prebiotically plausible lattices or containers that could eventually have been filled with just the right additions of primordial proteins, nucleic acids, lipids, and metabolites so as to constitute protocells capable of undergoing further chemical and biological evolution. Thermal polyaspartic acid microspheres are extremely simple models of protocells that are more amenable to precise quantitative experimental investigation than the proteinoid microspheres of Sidney W. Fox. We present here scanning electron microscope images of such thermal polyaspartic acid microspheres. Figure 1 shows thermal polyaspartic acid microspheres from L: -aspartic acid heated at 180 degrees C for 50 h, at a magnification of 3,500x. Figure 2 shows thermal polyaspartic acid microspheres from the same sample at a magnification of 7,000x. The thermal polyaspartic acid microspheres have a diameter of approximately 1 mum These images were viewed with a Hitachi S2460N scanning electron microscope at 20 kV acceleration voltage. Figure 1 Thermal polyaspartic acid microspheres from L: -aspartic acid heated at 180 degrees C for 50 h, at a magnification of 3,500x. Figure 2 Thermal polyaspartic acid microspheres from L: -aspartic acid heated at 180 degrees C for 50 h, at a magnification of 7,000x.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17120121     DOI: 10.1007/s11084-006-9044-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Orig Life Evol Biosph        ISSN: 0169-6149            Impact factor:   1.950


  3 in total

1.  Synthesis and characterization of bioactive conjugated near-infrared fluorescent proteinoid-poly(L-lactic acid) hollow nanoparticles for optical detection of colon cancer.

Authors:  Michal Kolitz-Domb; Enav Corem-Salkmon; Igor Grinberg; Shlomo Margel
Journal:  Int J Nanomedicine       Date:  2014-10-31

2.  Engineering of near infrared fluorescent proteinoid-poly(L-lactic acid) particles for in vivo colon cancer detection.

Authors:  Michal Kolitz-Domb; Igor Grinberg; Enav Corem-Salkmon; Shlomo Margel
Journal:  J Nanobiotechnology       Date:  2014-08-12       Impact factor: 10.435

3.  Engineering and use of proteinoid polymers and nanocapsules containing agrochemicals.

Authors:  Elisheva Sasson; Ruth Van Oss Pinhasi; Shlomo Margel; Liron Klipcan
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-06-08       Impact factor: 4.379

  3 in total

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