posted on 2024-11-07, 17:38authored byBrendan Moore, Linshan Zeng, Pavle Djuricanin, Ilsa R. Cooke, Kirk W. Madison, Takamasa Momose
The
origin of homochirality in biological organisms remains an
open question. Some suggest that its origin might be extraterrestrial,
specifically due to the exposure of chiral molecules to circularly
polarized photons in interstellar space, which could cause an initial
population imbalance leading to the homochirality observed today.
However, this extraterrestrial hypothesis has not been widely accepted,
largely due to the belief that molecular optical rotatory dispersion
is too insignificant to create the substantial imbalance required
for homochirality. Here we report experimental evidence that specific
conformers of neutral amino acids exhibit significant asymmetry in
the chiral destroying dissociation rate induced by circularly polarized
photons. The observed anisotropy factor for the lowest energy conformer
of leucine was remarkably large, reaching 0.1a factor of 13
times larger than observed for zwitterionic leucine in solid films,
and nearly 40 times greater than the anisotropy reported in the electronic
absorption spectrum of gas-phase leucine ensembles at room temperature.
This significant finding indicates that even if reported anisotropy
values in the electronic absorption spectrum are low, the dissociation
asymmetry of certain conformers can still be substantial. An anisotropy
factor of 0.1 could result in an initial enantiomeric excess exceeding
10%, even with a 90% extent of reaction. This discovery suggests that
asymmetric photodissociation of amino acids may have been a crucial
factor in the emergence of biological homochirality.