The seminal Urey–Miller experiments showed that molecules crucial to life such
as HCN could have formed in the reducing atmosphere of the Hadean Earth and then
dissolved in the oceans. Subsequent proponents of the “RNA World”
hypothesis have shown aqueous HCN to be the starting point for the formation of the
precursors of RNA and proteins. However, the conditions of early Earth suggest that
aqueous HCN would have had to react under a significant number of constraints.
Therefore, given the limiting conditions, could RNA and protein precursors still have
formed from aqueous HCN? If so, what mechanistic routes would have been followed? The
current computational study, with the aid of the ab initio nanoreactor (AINR), a
powerful new tool in computational chemistry, addresses these crucial questions.
Gratifyingly, not only do the results from the AINR approach show that aqueous HCN could
indeed have been the source of RNA and protein precursors, but they also indicate that
just the interaction of HCN with water would have sufficed to begin a series of
reactions leading to the precursors. The current work therefore provides important
missing links in the story of prebiotic chemistry and charts the road from aqueous HCN
to the precursors of RNA and proteins.
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