Thermally Accessible Prebiotic Pathways for Forming RNA and Protein Precursors

18 October 2022, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The search for prebiotic chemical pathways to biologically relevant molecules is a long- standing puzzle that has generated a menagerie of competing hypotheses with limited experimental prospects for falsification. However, the advent of computational network exploration methodologies has created the opportunity to compare the kinetic plausibility of various channels and even propose new pathways. Here, the space of organic molecules that can be formed within four reactions from water and hydrogen cyanide, two established prebiotic candidates for generating biological precursors, was comprehensively explored with a state-of-the-art exploration algorithm. A surprisingly diverse reactivity landscape is revealed within just a few steps of these simple molecules. Reaction pathways to several biologically relevant molecules were discovered involving lower activation energies and fewer reaction steps compared with recently proposed alternatives. Accounting for water-catalyzed reactions qualitatively affects the interpretation of the network kinetics. The case-study also highlights the omissions of simpler and lower barrier reaction pathways to certain products by other algorithms.

Keywords

reaction networks
prebiotic chemistry
reaction exploration

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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Additional timing and computational details for the study.
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