| Literature DB >> 33288754 |
Yasuhiro Oba1, Yoshinori Takano2, Hiroshi Naraoka3,4, Yoshihiro Furukawa5, Daniel P Glavin6, Jason P Dworkin6, Shogo Tachibana7,8.
Abstract
Despite extensive studies on the formation of organic molecules in various extraterrestrial environments, it still remains under debate when, where, and how such molecules were abiotically formed. A key molecule to solve the problem,Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33288754 PMCID: PMC7721876 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-20038-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Target molecules in the present study.
Molecular structure and exact mass information of hexamethylenetetramine (HMT) and some representative derivatives showing methyl-HMT, amino-HMT, hydroxyl-HMT, hydroxymethyl-HMT, methoxy-HMT, and monohydroxy-monomethyl-HMT discussed in this study. Note that monohydroxy-monomethyl-HMT possesses three structural isomers depending on the positions of the two functional groups.
Fig. 2Identification of hexamethylenetetramine in meteorites.
Mass chromatograms at the m/z of 141.1135 within a 3 ppm exact mass window at each monoisotopic mass for a hexamethylenetetramine (HMT) standard reagent, b HMT in Murchison, c Tagish Lake, and d Murray meteorites, measured using the InertSustain PFP column. The numbers in parenthesis represent the absolute scale in ion intensities for each chromatogram. The numbers near the peak represent the retention time. We note here that a retention time difference between the standard reagent and the target molecule sometimes occurs in a chromatographic separation for complex organic matter[27,47]. To compensate this issue, we always monitored the measured mass within 3-ppm window for the data quality assurance. Also, small levels of fluctuation in the retention time are caused by variations in daily conditions of the liquid chromatograph. The Tagish Lake and Murray extracts were analysed in a different day (the retention time for the HMT standard reagent was 21.07 min) with the Murchison extract.
Fig. 3Results of MS/MS experiments.
Mass fragmentation patterns of hexamethylenetetramine (HMT) in a the standard reagent and b the Murchison extract measured by MS/MS experiments (see the “Methods” section). A schematic image of HMT fragmentation is shown alongside the panel a. The 6–7 digit numbers in the mass spectra indicate the exact masses of the parent molecule (C6H13N4: the protonated ion of HMT) and its fragments). The fragmentation patterns are consistent with each other except the presence of peaks with a red asterisk in the Murchison extract, which are derived from other species coexisting with HMT. Note: the mass peak at the m/z of 68.9352 in the Murchison extract could not be successfully assigned to any ions under the assumption that the ion is composed of C, H, N, and O. The mass peak assigned to C7H11 (m/z = 95.0856) is a background signal on the LC condition.
Summary of HMT and possible HMT-derivative concentrations and relative abundances.
| Meteorite | Sample mass extracted (g) | Compound | Formula | Theoretical Mass M + H+ (Da) | Measured Mass M + H+ ( | Concentration (ppb)a | Relative abundance (%)b |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Murchison | 2 | HMT | C6H12N4 | 141.1135 | 141.1133 | 846 ± 37 | 100 |
| HMT-CH3 | C7H14N4 | 155.1291 | 155.1290 | 13 ± 0.4 | 2 | ||
| HMT-NH2 | C6H13N5 | 156.1234 | 156.1235 | 0.3 ± 0.1 | 0.03 | ||
| HMT-OH | C6H12N4O | 157.1084 | 157.1081 | 2 ± 0.3 | 0.2 | ||
| HMT-CH2OH and its isomersc | C7H14N4O | 171.1240 | 171.1237 | <4 ± 0.6 | <0.6 | ||
| Tagish Lake | 0.5 | HMT | C6H12N4 | 141.1135 | 141.1134 | 671 ± 9 | 79 |
| Murray | 2 | HMT | C6H12N4 | 141.1135 | 141.1135 | 29 ± 9 | 3 |
aThe values represent the average of two measurements with the statistical error.
bRelative to HMT in Murchison.
cPeaks could not be distinguished between isomers shown in Fig. 1; their upper limit was estimated from the largest peak on the chromatogram.
Fig. 4Possible identification of hexamethylenetetramine derivatives.
Mass chromatograms at the m/z of a 141.1135, b 155.1291, c 156.1244, d 157.1084, and e 171.1240 (3-ppm window at each monoisotopic mass), which correspond to hexamethylenetetramine (HMT), HMT-CH3, HMT-NH2, HMT-OH, and HMT-CH2OH, respectively, measured using the InertSustain PFP column, in the Murchison meteorite. Mass peaks identified in the panel e may include the structural isomers of HMT-CH2OH, such as HMT-OCH3 and HMT-OH(-CH3). The numbers on the upper right in each panel represent the absolute scale in ion intensities for each chromatogram.