Selective Adsorption and Chiral Amplification of Amino Acids in Vermiculite Clay -Implications for the origin of biochirality
Donald G. Fraser, Daniel Fitz, Thomas Jakschitz, Bernd M. Rode

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that vermiculite clay can selectively adsorb and amplify chirality of amino acids, potentially contributing to the origin of biological homochirality through nanofilm formation and chiral enrichment.
Contribution
It reveals that vermiculite clay can induce chiral enrichment of amino acids and act as a chiral amplifier, a novel insight into prebiotic chemistry and biochirality origins.
Findings
Chiral enrichment up to 1% per pass in amino acids.
Selective adsorption depends on the amino acid and clay interaction.
Clay nanofilms may have contributed to biochirality emergence.
Abstract
Smectite clays are hydrated layer silicates that, like micas, occur naturally in abundance. Importantly, they have readily modifiable interlayer spaces that provide excellent sites for nanochemistry. Vermiculite is one such smectite clay and in the presence of small chain-length alkyl-NH3Cl ions, forms sensitive, 1-D ordered model clay systems with expandable nano-pore inter-layer regions. These inter-layers readily adsorb organic molecules. N-propyl NH3Cl vermiculite clay gels were used to determine the adsorption of alanine, lysine and histidine by chiral HPLC. The results show that during reaction with fresh vermiculite interlayers, significant chiral enrichment of either L- and D-enantiomers occurs depending on the amino acid. Chiral enrichment of the supernatant solutions is up to about 1% per pass. In contrast, addition to clay interlayers already reacted with amino acid solutions…
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