Xeno Amino Acids: A look into biochemistry as we don't know it
Sean M. Brown, Christopher Mayer-Bacon, Stephen Freeland

TL;DR
This review explores the potential for alternative biochemistries in life, focusing on amino acids and their structures, and discusses how different chemical building blocks could influence the origin and evolution of life.
Contribution
It synthesizes current knowledge on non-Earth-like amino acids and their potential roles in alternative biochemistries, highlighting new research directions.
Findings
Amino acids are plausible targets for astrobiological research.
The preference for L-enantiomers remains unexplained.
Physicochemical constraints are less influential than evolutionary factors in amino acid selection.
Abstract
Would another origin of life resemble Earth's biochemical use of amino acids? Here we review current knowledge at three levels: 1) Could other classes of chemical structure serve as building blocks for biopolymer structure and catalysis? Amino acids now seem both readily available to, and a plausible chemical attractor for, life as we don't know it. Amino acids thus remain important and tractable targets for astrobiological research. 2) If amino acids are used, would we expect the same L-alpha-structural subclass used by life? Despite numerous ideas, it is not clear why life favors L-enantiomers. It seems clearer, however, why life on Earth uses the shortest possible (alpha-) amino acid backbone, and why each carries only one side chain. However, assertions that other backbones are physicochemically impossible have relaxed into arguments that they are disadvantageous. 3) Would we expect…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrigins and Evolution of Life · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research · Mass Spectrometry Techniques and Applications
MethodsSparse Evolutionary Training · Focus
