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Main Authors: Yang, Xinrui, Liu, Rui, Xu, Ruiqi, Cui, Zhaohua, Wang, Zhigang
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.10544
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author Yang, Xinrui
Liu, Rui
Xu, Ruiqi
Cui, Zhaohua
Wang, Zhigang
author_facet Yang, Xinrui
Liu, Rui
Xu, Ruiqi
Cui, Zhaohua
Wang, Zhigang
contents The racemization of amino acids constitutes one of the most elemental and critical reactions, holding primitive significance for understanding the life's origin and maintenance. Nevertheless, its mechanism at the atomic level has been persistently misunderstood for more than a century. In this work, we demonstrate that the racemization of amino acid molecules in aqueous environments can occur simultaneously by two pathways via the carboxyl (COOH) and amino (NH2) groups. Behind this result, the quantum mechanical tunneling (QMT) effect plays a pivotal role, as evidenced by the tunneling hindrance of the NH2 reaction and the tunneling enhancement of the COOH reaction. Notably, the disparity in the QMT effect leads to a crossover between the COOH and NH2 reactions within 200-257 K, such that NH2 reactions dominate at high temperatures and COOH reactions dominate at low temperatures. Our work emphasizes the significance of QMT effect in the racemization of amino acids and therefore introduces a dual-path coexistence mechanism, offering valuable insights into the origin of homochirality in extreme environments of the early Earth.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_10544
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Dual-Path Mechanism of Amino Acid Racemization Mediated by Quantum Mechanical Tunneling
Yang, Xinrui
Liu, Rui
Xu, Ruiqi
Cui, Zhaohua
Wang, Zhigang
Chemical Physics
Computational Physics
The racemization of amino acids constitutes one of the most elemental and critical reactions, holding primitive significance for understanding the life's origin and maintenance. Nevertheless, its mechanism at the atomic level has been persistently misunderstood for more than a century. In this work, we demonstrate that the racemization of amino acid molecules in aqueous environments can occur simultaneously by two pathways via the carboxyl (COOH) and amino (NH2) groups. Behind this result, the quantum mechanical tunneling (QMT) effect plays a pivotal role, as evidenced by the tunneling hindrance of the NH2 reaction and the tunneling enhancement of the COOH reaction. Notably, the disparity in the QMT effect leads to a crossover between the COOH and NH2 reactions within 200-257 K, such that NH2 reactions dominate at high temperatures and COOH reactions dominate at low temperatures. Our work emphasizes the significance of QMT effect in the racemization of amino acids and therefore introduces a dual-path coexistence mechanism, offering valuable insights into the origin of homochirality in extreme environments of the early Earth.
title Dual-Path Mechanism of Amino Acid Racemization Mediated by Quantum Mechanical Tunneling
topic Chemical Physics
Computational Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.10544