| Literature DB >> 28071908 |
Celia Blanco1, Michael Stich2, David Hochberg3.
Abstract
Understanding how biological homochirality may have emerged during chemical evolution remains a challenge for origin of life research. In keeping with this goal, we introduce and solve numerically a kinetic rate equation model of nucleated cooperative enantioselective polymerization in closed systems. The microreversible scheme includes (i) solution-phase racemization of the monomers, (ii) linear chain growth by stepwise monomer attachment, in both nucleation and elongation phases, and (iii) annealing or fusion of homochiral chains. Mechanically induced breakage of the longest chains maintains the system out of equilibrium and drives a breakage-fusion recycling mechanism. Spontaneous mirror symmetry breaking can be achieved starting from small initial enantiomeric excesses due to the intrinsic statistical fluctuations about the idealized racemic composition. The subsequent chiral amplification confirms the model's capacity for absolute asymmetric synthesis, without chiral cross-inhibition and without explicit autocatalysis.Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28071908 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.6b10705
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys Chem B ISSN: 1520-5207 Impact factor: 2.991