“…[3] Theprebiotic bricks of life as we know it are more or less of the composite type and can be roughly divided into four compound classes,1 ) a-amino acids,2 )polyhydroxyaldehydes,k etones,a nd polyols,3 )N-heterocycles,a nd 4) longalk(en)yl-chain fatty acids and alcohols.T hey should all covalently assemble (condense) in water, or without any solvent, under prebiotically and geochemically plausible reaction conditions from repeated units of similar fragments or molecules into macromolecules that bear aresemblance to known biomacromolecules,s uch as proteins (polypeptides), carbohydrates (polysaccharides), nucleic acids (polynucleotides), and lipid amphiphiles (phospholipids). Currently, prebiotic syntheses giving reasonable yields of specific a-amino acids [4] and N-heterocycles [5] are mastered best, followed by those of lipids [6] and sugars. [7] Specific prebiotic syntheses of nucleosides and nucleotides,however, have been unhappily at the bottom of this heap for too long.Nucleosides are composed of two precursor classes,o ne of which is particularly stable and usually readily accessed, namely the N-heterocycles.T he other compound class,p rebiotic carbohydrates,israther problematic from astability point of view.…”