Ezi meteorites ziqulethe zonke iibhloko zokwakha zeDNA

Scientists have found that three meteorites contain the chemical building elements of DNA and its companion RNA. A subset of these building components has previously been discovered in meteorites, but the remainder of the collection had been curiously absent from space rocks – until now.

Ezi meteorites ziqulethe zonke iibhloko zokwakha ze-DNA 1
Scientists found the building blocks of DNA and RNA in several meteorites, including the Murchison meteorite. © Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

According to the researchers, the new discovery supports the concept that four billion years ago, a bombardment of meteorites may have provided the chemical elements needed to kick-start the formation of the first life on Earth.

However, not everyone believes that all of the newly discovered DNA components are extraterrestrial in origin; rather, some may have ended up in meteorites after the rocks landed on Earth, according to Michael Callahan, an analytical chemist, astrobiologist, and associate professor at Boise State University who was not involved in the study. “Additional studies are needed” to rule out this possibility, Callahan told Sayensi ephilayo nge-imeyile.

Assuming that all of the compounds did originate in space, one subset of building blocks a class of compounds known as – pyrimidines appeared in “extremely low concentrations” in the meteorites, he added. This finding hints that the world’s first genetic molecules emerged not due to an influx of DNA components from space but rather as a result of the geochemical processes unfolding on early Earth, he added.

For the time being, however, “it’s hard to say” what concentration of DNA building blocks meteorites would have needed to contain to aid in the emergence of life on Earth, according to Jim Cleaves, a geochemist and president of the International Society for the Study of the Origin of Life who was not involved in the study. This matter is still being looked into.