Publication | Closed Access
Peptide Formation in the Prebiotic Era: Thermal Condensation of Glycine in Fluctuating Clay Environments
373
Citations
9
References
1978
Year
EngineeringAmino AcidsMarine ChemistryPeptide ScienceProtein RefoldingOrganic GeochemistryThermal CondensationProtein FoldingPeptide FormationMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyPrebiotic EraMolecular GeochemistryProtein ChemistryBiogeochemistryBiochemistryBiogeochemical CycleGeochemical CyclingLonger OligopeptidesCyclic VariationsBiomolecular EngineeringEarly DiagenesisPeptide SynthesisGeochemistryChemical EvolutionPaleoecologyMedicine
As geologically relevant models of prebiotic environments, systems consisting of clay, water, and amino acids were subjected to cyclic variations in temperature and water content. Fluctuations of both variables produced longer oligopeptides in higher yields than were produced by temperature fluctuations alone. The results suggest that fluctuating environments provided a favorable geological setting in which the rate and extent of chemical evolution would have been determined by the number and frequency of cycles.
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