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Prebiotic oligomerization and self-assembly of structurally diverse xenobiological monomers

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dc.contributor.author Chandru, Kuhan en_US
dc.contributor.author Jia, Tony Z. en_US
dc.contributor.author Mamajanov, Irena en_US
dc.contributor.author BAPAT, NIRAJA en_US
dc.contributor.author Cleaves, H. James en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2020-12-04T11:39:56Z
dc.date.available 2020-12-04T11:39:56Z
dc.date.issued 2020-10 en_US
dc.identifier.citation Scientific Reports,10. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 2045-2322 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/5402
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-74223-5 en_US
dc.description.abstract Prebiotic chemists often study how modern biopolymers, e.g., peptides and nucleic acids, could have originated in the primitive environment, though most contemporary biomonomers don’t spontaneously oligomerize under mild conditions without activation or catalysis. However, life maynot have originated using the same monomeric components that it does presently. There may be numerous non-biological (or “xenobiological”) monomer types that were prebiotically abundant and capable of facile oligomerization and self-assembly. Many modern biopolymers degrade abiotically preferentially via processes which produce thermodynamically stable ring structures, e.g. diketopiperazines in the case of proteins and 2′, 3′-cyclic nucleotide monophosphates in the case of RNA. This weakness is overcome in modern biological systems by kinetic control, but this need not have been the case for primitive systems. We explored here the oligomerization of a structurally diverse set of prebiotically plausible xenobiological monomers, which can hydrolytically interconvert between cyclic and acyclic forms, alone or in the presence of glycine under moderate temperature drying conditions.These monomers included various lactones, lactams and a thiolactone, which varied markedly in their stability, propensity to oligomerize and apparent modes of initiation, and the oligomeric products of some of these formed self-organized microscopic structures which may be relevant to protocell formation. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Springer Nature en_US
dc.subject Amino-Acids en_US
dc.subject Murchison Meteorite en_US
dc.subject Organic-Matter en_US
dc.subject Free-Energy en_US
dc.subject Amide Bond en_US
dc.subject Origin en_US
dc.subject Polymerization en_US
dc.subject RNA en_US
dc.subject Precursors en_US
dc.subject Evolution en_US
dc.subject 2020 en_US
dc.subject 2020-DEC-WEEK1 en_US
dc.subject TOC-DEC-2020 en_US
dc.title Prebiotic oligomerization and self-assembly of structurally diverse xenobiological monomers en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.contributor.department Dept. of Biology en_US
dc.identifier.sourcetitle Scientific Reports en_US
dc.publication.originofpublisher Foreign en_US


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