NASA Innovator of Year Hunts
for Extraterrestrial Amino Acids
The hunt
for the organic molecules that create proteins and enzymes critical for life
here on Earth has largely happened in sophisticated terrestrial laboratories
equipped with high-tech gadgetry needed to tease out their presence in space
rocks and other extraterrestrial samples.
A
technologist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., now wants
to take that search to the sources themselves. Stephanie Getty, who recently
was selected as Goddard's Innovator of the Year for her trailblazing work in
the area of advanced instrumentation, has won $1.2 million from NASA's
Astrobiology Science and Technology Instrument Development (ASTID) program to
advance the Organics Analyzer for Sampling Icy Surfaces (OASIS).
This
miniaturized liquid chromatograph-mass spectrometer leverages technologies
developed under previous Goddard-sponsored research and development efforts to
study the chirality, or "handedness," of amino acids on the icy moons
of the outer planets, asteroids, and Kuiper Belt Objects.
"It's
like we're packing up a well-equipped Earth lab and flying it to an asteroid or
another solar system body, where we can get access to a pristine supply of
these organic molecules to study," Getty said, adding that by going to the
source, scientists reduce the risk of contaminating samples with Earth-borne
compounds."With an instrument like OASIS, we could get that much closer to
understanding how organic chemicals formed in the solar system, whether the
potential for life exists elsewhere, and what may have seeded life here on
Earth."
And
OASIS would carry out this science with 100 time’s
greater sensitivity than what was possible with previously flown liquid chromatograph-mass spectrometers, she added.
Why
Amino Acids?
The
hunt for amino acids in extraterrestrial sources began 50 years ago when
scientists discovered a variety of non-terrestrial amino acids in meteorites,
remnants of asteroids that had fallen to Earth. Their discovery revolutionized
the field of astrobiology, reigniting the question of whether life, as we know
it, existed elsewhere in the solar system and beyond.
Amino
acids, in part, hold the key to ultimately answering that question. They are
the building blocks of proteins - the workhorse molecules of life, used in
everything from creating hair and fingernails, to the enzymes that speed up or
regulate chemical reactions inside cells.
Just
as the 26 letters of the alphabet are arranged in limitless combinations to
make words, life uses 20 different amino acids in a huge variety of
arrangements to build millions of different proteins. Amino acids demonstrate
another interesting characteristic. Although they come in two
non-superimposable forms - left-handed and right-handed - only abiotic or
non-biological organic compounds use both.
The
amino acids that give rise to life must have the same orientation or chirality,
which means they use only one of the two available mirror images of the
amino-acid structure. Left-Handed BiasLife on Earth got established with only
the left-handed version, leading scientists to wonder whether this inclination
arose because of random processes or whether meteorites may have seeded this
propensity.
To
find out, Getty's colleagues at the Goddard Astrobiology Analytical Laboratory have
studied carbon-rich meteorites and tiny grains collected from the Wild 2 comet.
They discovered an excess of the left-handed amino acids in some of the
meteorite samples they studied, suggesting that left-handed amino acids got
their start in space, where conditions in asteroids favoured the creation of
this particular orientation.
"Research
shows that meteorites seeding the early Earth could have jump started
left-handed-based protein in life as we know it today," said OASIS
Co-Investigator Danny Glavin, a world-renowned expert in extraterrestrial
organic chemistry at NASA Goddard. "They contributed these molecules that
may have created an initial bias toward left-handedness."
The
question is, does the bias exist on other solar system bodies, and if so, does
it favor left- or right-handed amino acids? OASIS's ability to detect amino
acids and determine their chirality - the ratio of left- to right-handed
molecules - will be an important capability for ultimately answering that
question, Glavin said.
For further information
visit: http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/NASA_Innovator_of_Year_Hunts_for_Extraterrestrial_Amino_Acids_999.html
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