Amino Acids in Comets and Meteorites: Stability under Gamma Radiation and Preservation of Chirality
Susana Iglesias-Groth, Franco Cataldo, Ornella Ursini, Arturo Manchado

TL;DR
This study investigates the stability of amino acids in comets and meteorites under gamma radiation, showing they can survive significant doses and retain chirality, which has implications for the origin of life.
Contribution
It provides experimental data on the radiolysis and radioracemization rates of all 20 chiral amino acids, extrapolating their survival over Solar System timescales.
Findings
Amino acids can survive doses up to 14 MGy with significant quantities.
Chirality is preserved despite gamma radiation exposure.
Original amino acid concentrations could have been up to six times higher in the presolar nebula.
Abstract
Amino acids in solar system bodies may have played a key role in the chemistry that led to the origin of life on Earth. We present laboratory studies testing the stability of amino acids against gamma radiation photolysis. All the 20 chiral amino acids in the levo form used in the proteins of the current terrestrial biochemistry have been irradiated in the solid state with gamma radiation to a dose of 3.2 MGy which is the dose equivalent to that derived by radionuclide decay in comets and asteroids in 1.05x109 years. For each amino acid the radiolysis degree and the radioracemization degree was measured by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and by optical rotatory dispersion (ORD) spectroscopy. From these measurements a radiolysis rate constant kdsc and a radioracemization rate constant krac have been determined for each amino acid and extrapolated to a dose of 14 MGy which…
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