| Literature DB >> 32637854 |
Fabio Pietrucci1, José C Aponte2,3, Richard Starr2,4, Andrea Pérez-Villa1, Jamie E Elsila2, Jason P Dworkin2, A Marco Saitta1.
Abstract
The organic compounds found in carbonaceous chondrite meteorites provide insight into primordial solar system chemistry. Evaluating the formation and decomposition mechanisms of meteoritic amino acids may aid our understanding of the origins of life and homochirality on Earth. The amino acid glycine is widespread in meteorites and other extraterrestrial environments; other amino acids, such as isovaline, are found with enantiomeric excesses in some meteorites. The relationship between meteoritic amino acids and other compounds with similar molecular structures, such as aliphatic monoamines and monocarboxylic acids is unclear; experimental results evaluating the decomposition of amino acids have produced inconclusive results about the preferred pathways, reaction intermediates, and if the conditions applied may be compatible with those occurring inside meteoritic parent bodies. In this work, we performed extensive tandem metadynamics, umbrella sampling, and committor analysis to simulate the neutral mild hydrothermal decomposition mechanisms of glycine and isovaline and put them into context for the origins of meteoritic organic compounds. Our ab initio simulations aimed to determine free energy profiles and decomposition pathways for glycine and isovaline. We found that under our modeled conditions, methylammonium, glycolic acid, and sec-butylamine are the most likely decomposition products. These results suggest that meteoritic aliphatic monocarboxylic acids are not produced from decomposition of meteoritic amino acids. Our results also indicate that the decomposition of L-isovaline prefers an enantioselective pathway resulting in the production of (S)-sec-butylamine.Entities:
Keywords: ab initio molecular dynamics; enhanced sampling; glycine; isovaline; meteoritic organics; parent body processes
Year: 2018 PMID: 32637854 PMCID: PMC7340093 DOI: 10.1021/acsearthspacechem.8b00025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Earth Space Chem Impact factor: 3.475