Stereoisomers cannot be interconverted without breaking covalent bonds. They are distinct molecules. Almost all amino acids in living organisms are L-amino acids. Proteins are almost exclusively composed of L-amino acids and not D-amino acids.
The α-carbon atom of amino acids is chiral, or asymmetric. You need at least one chiral atom in a molecule in order to have stereoisomers. One amino acid (glycine) does not have a chiral α-carbon so there is only one configuration of glycine.
When amino acids are synthesized in a chemistry laboratory, you often end up with a mixture of equal amounts of L- and D- stereoisomers. When you examine the amino acids found in meteorites and in the vicinity of stars, you find a mixture of both stereoisomers. These are called racemic mixtures since the process of converting one stereoisomer into another is called racemization.
Now, the fact that amino acids in living organisms are all L- forms is not a problem since the L-amino acids are the only ones that are synthesized in any appreciable amounts. All of the amino acid biosynthesis pathways produce only L- forms and not D- forms. This is not unusual since enzyme catalyzed reactions are usually sterospecific. It's not a surprise that modern proteins are composed of L-amino acids because those are the only ones available inside the cell.
The "problem" arises when we start to think about how life arose in the first place. The general assumption is that life arose in a warm pond containing a racemic mixture of L- and D- amino acids. If that is true then how did life evolve to select exclusively L-amino acids? Most of the proposed solutions to these questions make assumptions about how the primordial soup could have spontaneously come to have a preference for L-amino acids over D- amino acids.
I'd like to propose another way of thinking about this problem.1
Let's assume there was a primordial soup where amino acids came together spontaneously to form short peptides. In the beginning, the soup contained racemic mixtures of the D- and L-forms of amino acids. These molecules were formed spontaneously by the kinds of chemical reactions that are simulated in the laboratory.
Some of the random peptides acted as catalysts for chemical reactions. This is observed in modern-day experiments. One kind of reaction, amino acid synthesis, would have been especially favorable since it created more amino acids and led to more peptides.
The simplest pathway to more amino acids is the formation of glycine, probably by adding an amino group to acetate or glycerol. (This pathway no longer exists.) The next simplest is the conversion of pyruvate (a common three carbon organic acid) to alanine—a fairly simple transamination reaction.
In modern cells, this reaction is catalyzed by sophisticated transaminases but in the beginning it would have been catalyzed by short peptides that formed spontaneously in the primordial soup. Such reactions are stereospecific, the modern reaction only produces L-alanine and never D-alanine (well, hardly ever!). Let's assume that a similar reaction in the beginning produced, by chance, L-alanine.
Another simple pathway is from oxaloacetate (a common four carbon organic acid) to aspartate. Both of these reactions require a relatively simple addition of ammonia to a keto group and both reactions could have been catalyzed (inefficiently) by the same peptide.
As I mentioned above, enzyme catalyzed reactions tend to be stereospecific so it's likely that the early products were L-alanine and L-aspartate from the same enzyme. They could have been D-alanine and D-aspartate, but they weren't. As the concentrations of glycine, L-alanine and L-aspartate increased there were more and more peptides formed and the new peptides were enriched in these two particular L-amino acids.
Other simple amino acid synthesis reactions were catalyzed in the primordial soup. The most likely one is the synthesis of serine from glycerol or glycerate (common three carbon organic alcohols or organic acids). Again, the enzyme catalyzed reactions will only produce one isomer of the amino acid and there might have been selection for those parts of the soup that made L-serine (instead of D-serine) because the L-serine could more easily combine with L-alanine and L-aspartate to make many more peptides. In this case, the specificity of the reaction derives from selecting D-glycerate over L-glycerate as the substrate.
L-serine is the precursor to L-cysteine so it's likely that L-cysteine was also one of the early amino acids to accumulate in the primordial soup. This was an important addition to the repertoire since L-cysteine has a sulfur group and that leads to many more possibilities for catalytic active sites in the peptides. Note that once L-serine began to accumulate in the soup it led directly to the stereospecific L-cysteine. You can't make D-cysteine from L-serine so there's no racemization problem once L-serine accumulates.
L-glutarate (from alpha-ketoglutartic acid, a common five-carbon organic acid) is another good candidate for the primitive amino acids. (It's quite possible that L-alanine, L-asparate, and L-glutamate were all made by the same primitive enzyme using very similar 3, 4, and 5-carbon substrates.)
At this point there would have been all kinds of peptides containing various combinations of L-alanine, L-aspartate, L-serine, glycine, L-cysteine, and L-glutamate since these six amino acids have become much more abundant that the ones formed spontaneously by uncatalyzed reactions that produce a racemic mixture. This is probably the time when there was a shift to encoding peptides in a sequence of nucleotides.
This is an important point. The shift to more and more complex peptides did not have to take place in a random mixture of both forms of all 20 amino acids. It could have taken place under conditions where there was already a significant enrichment of a small number of L-amino acids due to catalytic biosynthesis from non-amino acid precursors.
There's some suggestive evidence to indicate that the primitive genetic code was much simpler than the one we see today and may have only had codons for the six initial amino acids. The other L-amino acid synthesis pathways arose later on and the genetic code expanded when codons were "stolen" from the precursors of these new L-amino acids.
One of the primitive codons for aspartate, for example, might have been AXX (any codon beginning with A). L-aspartate is the precursor to: L-lysine (AAA, AAG), L-asparagine (AAU, AAC), L-threonine (ACX), L-methionine (AUG), and L-isoleucine (AUU, AUC, AUA). The idea is that the new amino acids were originally synthesized on L-aspartate that was attached to its tRNA and they were incorporated into proteins at some positions in place of L-asparate. (This hypothesis on the origin of the genetic code was developed by my former colleague Jeff Wong. The idea came to him while teaching an undergraduate course in biochemistry ... but that's another story.)
Note that many amino acids are made from pre-existing amino acids. Once you have a supply of L-aspartate, for example, it follows that the derivatives will also be L- forms. There's no need to postulate that the preferential use of L-asparagine, L-threonine, L-methinione, and L-isoleucence, in contrast to the D- forms, arose independently. This greatly reduces the probability problem that most people are hung up on.
I don't have any good ideas about how the transition to encoded peptides happened but that's not the real point of this speculative posting.
The real points are ....
- The most primitive catalysts were probably not very big. They were probably composed of mixtures of L- and D-amino acid residues.
- The first important step was synthesis of new stereospecific amino acids which meant that the process was no longer dependent on the original pool of compounds that formed spontaneously.
- The first peptides and polypeptides (proteins) probably contained only six amino acids. These are the amino acids that can be easily made from readily available precursors.
The original choice of the first L-amino acids over their D-isomers was probably an accident. It could just as easily have been the D- amino acids.
UPDATE: I now believe that Metabolism First and the Origin of Life is a more likely explanation for the origin of life. Please ignore references to "primordial soup" in the essay above. My conversion doesn't change the point. In the beginning very simple amino acids were spontaneously synthesized in restricted environments around thermal vents. By chance, the first chiral amino acid, alanine?, may have been L-alanine. All other may have been synthesized using L- amino acid precursors and this explains the the racemization problem.
1. This is a modified version of an article that was originally posted on talk.origins in January, 2004.
Couple of interesting recent papers:
ReplyDeletePizzarello, S. et al. (2008) Molecular asymmetry in extraterrestrial chemistry: Insights from a pristine meteorite. PNAS, 105, 3700-3704.
The nonracemic amino acids of meteorites provide the only natural example of molecular asymmetry measured so far outside the biosphere. Because extant life depends on chiral homogeneity for the structure and function of biopolymers, the study of these meteoritic compounds may offer insights into the establishment of prebiotic attributes in chemical evolution as well as the origin of terrestrial homochirality. However, all efforts to understand the origin, distribution, and scope of these amino acids' enantiomeric excesses (ee) have been frustrated by the ready exposure of meteorites to terrestrial contaminants and the ubiquitous homochirality of such contamination. We have analyzed the soluble organic composition of a carbonaceous meteorite from Antarctica that was collected and stored under controlled conditions, largely escaped terrestrial contamination and offers an exceptionally pristine sample of prebiotic material. Analyses of the meteorite diastereomeric amino acids alloisoleucine and isoleucine allowed us to show that their likely precursor molecules, the aldehydes, also carried a sizable molecular asymmetry of up to 14% in the asteroidal parent body. Aldehydes are widespread and abundant interstellar molecules; that they came to be present, survived, and evolved in the solar system carrying ee gives support to the idea that biomolecular traits such as chiral asymmetry could have been seeded in abiotic chemistry ahead of life.
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/105/10/3700
and
Breslow, R. and Levine, M.S. (2006) Amplification of enantiomeric concentrations under credible prebiotic conditions. PNAS, 103, 12979-12980.
Solutions with as little as 1% enantiomeric excess (ee) of D- or L-phenylalanine are amplified to 90% ee (a 95/5 ratio) by two successive evaporations to precipitate the racemate. Such a process on the prebiotic earth could lead to a mechanism by which meteoritic chiral {alpha}-alkyl amino acids could form solutions with high ee values that were needed for the beginning of biology.
This paper is free:
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/103/35/12979
I did a post on the origin of biological chirality a while back - it addresses a slightly different point (Is the origin of biological chirality a no-brainer?)
ReplyDeleteDr. Moran,
ReplyDeleteWhen you say this: "Almost all amino acids in living organisms are L-amino acids. Proteins are almost exclusively composed of L-amino acids and not D-amino acids" do you mean there are rare exceptions of D-amino acid use, or are you just referring to the achirality of glycine?
For years it's been proposed that clays and/or pyrite have played a role acting as templates and I just recently became aware of a proposal that micas may also have played a role*.
ReplyDeleteAll of these elements are present in current environments, such as hot springs and hydrothermal vent systems, that have been proposed as likely environments conducive to prebiotic conditions for the origin of life?
Would any or all of these materials acting as catalysts/templates contribute to "selection" of biological chirality.
*Combined this would be the Soup, Sandwich & a Slice of Pizza Hypothesis. As soon as someone can find a way to add beer the grand unification will be complete.
Egads! I replaced the wrong period with a question mark in editing. Apologies all around. [slinks away]
ReplyDeleteanonymous asks,
ReplyDeleteWhen you say this: "Almost all amino acids in living organisms are L-amino acids. Proteins are almost exclusively composed of L-amino acids and not D-amino acids" do you mean there are rare exceptions of D-amino acid use, or are you just referring to the achirality of glycine?
There are some rare examples of D-amino acids in living organisms. The best known examples are probably the peptidoglycans of bacterial cell walls.
I can't think of any D-amino acids in proteins but I'm willing to bet they exist. There's an exception to almost everything in biology.
I've always been fascinated by this little curiosity of life. To me, it seems that this is probably one of the most important steps before life can develop on a planet. I find it hard to believe that it's an accident that L-amino acids "won the battle". There must be a reason, but maybe it's just too far in the past to ever figure out. Wouldn't it be interesting if one day in the far far future we meet extraterrestrial life that is composed of all D-amino acids or some other kind of chemical compound. Who knows, there might be a "mirror" earth out there somewhere where your chiral twin is enjoying an icecream made of L-sugars!
ReplyDeleteanonymous says,
ReplyDeleteI find it hard to believe that it's an accident that L-amino acids "won the battle". There must be a reason ...
I've tried to explain why this accident is much less improbable than most people realize. There may have been a single event that led to synthesis of three L-amino acids and from then on there was a bias in favor of synthesizing others.
Do you have any significant objections to the scenario I proposed or is it just a bias against chance?
No, no objections to this. Since reading your blog and learning about evolution, I can see that chance plays a big role in many things. It's just the physicist in me that wants to say it could have been caused by some external process. I remember coming across a publication several years ago that made the suggestion that the slightly left or right circularly polarized UV light that the sun emits (I can't remember which one it is) would preferentially destroy one type of amino acid and not the other on a pre-biotic earth that had no atmosphere, thus creating the initial imbalance to get the ball rolling. I had read about the clay surface preferences as well and thought that was pretty interesting.
ReplyDeleteActually it is the local space biomolecular symmetry breaking that is harder to understand, as the post implicitly suggests. And that was at the level of a few percent, now SteveF has a reference with 14 % chirality.
ReplyDeleteBut here are some claimed sources of polarization in astronomy, including circular polarization from local magnetic regions of suns. So a sun's circular polarization can be slightly asymmetric, eh? Perhaps handedness from the rotation coupled with the magnetic fields could be the reason for affecting such emission.
The α-carbon atom of amino acids is chiral, or asymmetric.
Nitpick: Technically chirality is a consequence of lacking a certain kind of symmetry. While it can have others, such as rotational symmetry.
Thanks for your great post , can you tell me why all amino acids in human protein are type L-amino acid?
ReplyDelete