All scientific approaches to the origin of life share a common problem: a chemical path to lipids as main constituents of extant cellular enclosures. Here we show by isotope-controlled experiments that unsaturated C3,5,7,9-monocarboxylic acids form by one-pot reaction of acetylene (C 2 H 2) and carbon monoxide (CO) in contact with nickel sulfide (NiS) in hot aqueous medium. The primary products are toto-olefinic monocarboxylic acids with CO-derived COOH groups undergoing subsequent stepwise hydrogenation with CO as reductant. In the resulting unsaturated monocarboxylic acids the double bonds are mainly centrally located with mainly trans-configuration. The reaction conditions are compatible with an origin of life in volcanic-hydrothermal sub-seafloor flow ducts.
CITATION STYLE
Scheidler, C., Sobotta, J., Eisenreich, W., Wächtershäuser, G., & Huber, C. (2016). Unsaturated C3,5,7,9-monocarboxylic acids by aqueous, one-pot carbon fixation: Possible relevance for the origin of life. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep27595
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