The fundamental questions of “Where do we come from?” and “How did life begin?” date back millennia. Yet, the scientific community still seeks to understand abiogenesis, the origin of life.… Click to show full abstract
The fundamental questions of “Where do we come from?” and “How did life begin?” date back millennia. Yet, the scientific community still seeks to understand abiogenesis, the origin of life. It is now generally agreed that any answer to this question must involve an explanation for the emergence of biological homochirality, that naturally appearing biomolecules from organisms occur with a particular handedness (enantiomeric form), for example, L-amino acids and D-sugars. A unifying concept among deterministic theories for homochirality is the presence of a chiral bias, which breaks the symmetry for driving the formation of molecules with a given handedness over that of the other. The bias has previously been attributed to circularly polarized light, fluid dynamics, and magnetic fields, among many others (1). In PNAS, Ozturk and Sasselov (2) approach this age-old question by proposing that the symmetry breaking involves a phenomenon known as chiral-induced spin selectivity (CISS). A central feature of the CISS effect is the coupling between the intrinsic angular momentum of an electron, or its spin, and the molecular frame of a chiral molecule. Electrons exist in one of two possible angular momentum states and are commonly referred to as either spin-up or spin-down. Multiple studies have shown that electrons of one spin type favorably transmit through an assembly composed of left-handed molecules, but the other spin type does not (3). Conversely, the opposite preference for spin transmission becomes true when the assembly is composed of right-handed molecules. A chiral molecule’s spin preference manifests for electrons transmitted through the molecules, for charge exchange between two chiral molecules, or for a chiral molecule and a magnetized surface (3, 4). The latter example forms the basis of Ozturk and Sasselov’s (2) conjecture that the spin of electrons can impart enantioselectivity for the production of chiral molecules from achiral precursors under conditions that are believed to be consistent with that of prebiotic Earth. Precedent exists for their hypothesis that magnetized surfaces can lead to enantioselective reactions and the formation of chiral molecules from achiral precursors (5, 6), and others have considered the implications of CISS for the origin of life (7). Experimental studies have shown that CISS operates on chemical processes of multiple length scales and of varying complexity; see the summary in Fig. 1. Experiments involving more-complex multistep reactions have shown that a preferred molecular handedness can emerge for systems that do not initially possess any chirality (8). Features of CISS have also proven to be influential in biological processes, such as electron transport in proteins and across cell surfaces, as well as in allosteric regulation (9–11). In previous work, Sasselov et al. (12) proposed chemical pathways for the origin of biomolecular building blocks that are consistent with prebiotic Earth conditions. This picture involves the accumulation of reactants (precursor chemicals) in shallow subaqueous basins that undergo photochemical reactions through UV radiation, believed to be extant at that time undefined. That picture did not account for molecular chirality, however; and Ozturk and Sasselov (2) extend that model to account for chirality, by invoking the CISS effect and magnetite as the origin of a chiral bias. Magnetite, a ferrimagnetic material, is an abundant constituent of subaqueous sedimentary mineral deposits on the anoxic Earth, circa 1.8 billion to 3.7 billion years ago (13). Ozturk and Sasselov propose that UV irradiation generates spin-polarized photoelectrons from uniformly magnetized magnetite, which then initiate enantioselective chemical reactions near the magnetite surface because of the CISS effect. Studies have shown that a spin selectivity dependence exists between the molecular frame of a chiral molecule and the direction of an Fig. 1. Examples of CISS-related processes in chemical and biological systems which may have contributed to the evolutionary progression responsible for the origin of life. Spin effects for facilitating chemical reactions are discussed in refs. 5, 6, and 8, spin interactions among chiral molecules are reviewed in ref. 9, the spin-filtering capabilities of proteins are reviewed in refs. 7 and 9, CISS-based allostery is described in ref. 11, and the effect of CISS on extracellular respiration is discussed in ref.10. Note that ET stands for electron transfer and red arrows indicate an electron with a defined spin direction.
               
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