Meteoritic Abundances of Fatty Acids and Potential Reaction Pathways in Planetesimals
James C.-Y. Lai, Ben K. D. Pearce, Ralph E. Pudritz, Drake Lee

TL;DR
This study analyzes fatty acid abundances in meteorites, explores their potential formation pathways, and highlights Fischer-Tropsch-type synthesis as a key process in planetesimals relevant to prebiotic chemistry.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of meteoritic fatty acids and proposes Fischer-Tropsch-type synthesis as a plausible formation pathway in meteorite parent bodies.
Findings
Straight-chain monocarboxylic acids dominate in meteorites.
CR meteorites show a peak in fatty acids at 5-6 carbons.
Fischer-Tropsch-type synthesis identified as promising pathway.
Abstract
The origin of fatty acids on the prebiotic Earth is important as they likely formed the encapsulating membranes of the first protocells. Carbon-rich meteorites (i.e., carbonaceous chondrites) such as Murchison and Tagish Lake are well known to contain these molecules, and their delivery to the early planet by intense early meteorite bombardments constitutes a key prebiotic source. We collect the fatty acid abundances measured in various carbonaceous chondrites from the literature and analyze them for patterns and correlations. Fatty acids in meteorites include straight-chain and branched-chain monocarboxylic and dicarboxylic acids up to 12 carbons in length---fatty acids with at least 8 carbons are required to form vesicles, and modern cell membranes employ lipids with ~12--20 carbons. To understand the origin of meteoritic fatty acids, we search the literature for abiotic fatty acid…
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