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by Amanda Doyle for Astrobiology Magazine Moffett Field CA (SPX) Jan 16, 2014
Only 20 standard amino acids are used to build proteins, but why exactly nature "chose" these particular amino acids is still a mystery. One step towards solving this is to explore the "amino acid space", the set of possible or hypothetical amino acids that might have been used instead. New research has used computer models to construct a large database of plausible amino acids, revealing thousands of amino acid structures that could have been used. All organisms on Earth employ the same workforce to perform a wide range of essential biochemical tasks. This workforce is comprised of proteins, which are constructed from a long string of amino acids attached to each other. Even for proteins with particularly long chains of amino acids, there are still only 20 different types of amino acids which are genetically encoded. These amino acids are essentially the building blocks of life, and the same 20 standard amino acids have been used in proteins throughout the history of life on Earth, since the existence of the Last Universal Common Ancestor three to four billions years ago. Amino acids all have a similar "backbone" structure, which is the foundation upon which the acid is built. This backbone is held together via a single carbon atom acting as a bridge to connect different groups of atoms. Amino acids with a single carbon connector are called alpha amino acids, however it is possible to have more than one carbon atom in the bridge. In this case, they are called beta amino acids and so on. A group of atoms, called a sidechain, is affixed to the backbone, and it is the structure of the sidechain that differs from one amino acid to the next, creating a staggering amount of variability. Of course, amino acids don't just occur in proteins. There are many more that have different biological functions, and some amino acids are also produced abiotically. Some of these abiotic amino acids are not exclusive to the Earth. For instance, the Murchison meteorite was found to be harboring at least 75 amino acids, and it is even thought that the amino acid glycine might exist in the interstellar medium. However, abiotic chemistry can still only account for half of the 20 genetically encoded amino acids, and there are many unanswered questions as to the role amino acids play. Could extraterrestrial life use a different set of amino acids? Why did life on Earth select those particular amino acids? What other amino acids could have been selected? These are all open questions in astrobiology, and one step towards answering them is to gauge the diversity of the amino acids that could have been used for life on Earth.
Defining amino acids They input a molecular formula into a computer program that had the capability to visualize different amino acids structures based on this formula. However, computing all possible amino acids is a strenuous task for even the fastest computers. Also, listing every possible amino acid does not narrow down the ones of interest to astrobiology. Therefore the main challenge for the scientists was actually in defining what an amino acid should be, and they used different methods to do this.
Different variations of amino acids This isomer space varies in size for each amino acid, partially depending on how many atoms there are in the acid. Therefore, the isomer space is largest around tryptophan, the amino acid with the greatest number of atoms.
Fuzzy formulas This means that instead of telling the software that every atom of every chemical element must occur a certain number of times, the fuzzy formula tells the software to be a bit more vague, or "fuzzy", so that the element can have various numbers of atoms. For example, oxygen could be specified as a range from 2 to 4, so that the program would search for solutions that included 2, 3 or 4 oxygen atoms. Using this fuzzy formula uncovered a treasure trove of additional amino acid combinations. However, a single fuzzy formula can only be used to explore the space around 15 of the amino acids. A single formula that can include all 20 is still too much for current computing power to handle.
Biochemistry's palette "There a lot of ways one could classify the coded amino acids according to functional groups and properties," said Jim Cleaves. "But if you stuck to just using the functional groups observed in biology and computationally poked around with that chemical diversity, it wouldn't be nearly as wide as what we came up with, and it's clear that biochemistry had a huge palette to play with during evolution." Using ten fuzzy formulas proved to be the most successful way of exploring the amino acid space. Not only does this method have less processing time than using one fuzzy formula, but it has the advantage of including variations of all of the genetic amino acids.
Cartography of amino acids They compared the output of both methods to databases of biological alpha amino acids beyond the 20 genetic ones, as well as to amino acids found in carbonaceous meteorites. Many of the amino acids present in the computer library also occur in nature, showing that the computer generation of amino acids is a way of identifying potentially interesting amino acids that could be used in proteins. It is even possible that there are undiscovered natural amino acids that have had their chemical structure probed by the computer database. The computer libraries generated by the team can now be used as a foundation for further exploration into the jungle of amino acids, and may ultimately lead to an understanding of life's building blocks. The research was published in the November issue of the Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling and can be found here.
Related Links Astrobiology Magazine Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com
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