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In 1953, chemist Stanley Miller published a landmark experiment showing how some of the molecules of life could have formed on a young Earth.

Miller, who died in 2007, left behind boxes of experimental samples that he never analyzed.

Now, the first-ever analysis of some of those old samples has revealed another way that important molecules could have formed on early Earth.

The study discovered a path from simple to complex compounds amid Earth’s prebiotic soup. More than 4 billion years ago, amino acids could have been attached together, forming peptides. These peptides ultimately may have led to the proteins and enzymes necessary for life’s biochemistry, as we know it.

Scientists analyzed samples from an experiment Miller performed in 1958. To the reaction flask, Miller added a chemical that at the time wasn’t widely thought to have been available on early Earth.

The reaction had successfully formed peptides. The new study also successfully replicated the experiment and explained why the reaction works.

“It was clear that the results from this old experiment weren’t some sort of artifact. They were real,” says Jeffrey Bada, professor of marine chemistry at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the UC San Diego. Bada was a former student and colleague of Miller’s.

‘All these other little boxes’

Jeffrey Bada was Stanley Miller’s second graduate student. The two were close and collaborated throughout Miller’s career. After Miller suffered a severe stroke in 1999, Bada inherited boxes of experimental samples from Miller’s lab. While sorting through the boxes, Bada saw “electric discharge sample” in Miller’s handwriting on the outside of one box.

“I opened it up and inside were all these other little boxes,” Bada says. “I started looking at them, and realized they were from all his original experiments; the ones he did in 1953 that he wrote the famous paper in Science on, plus a whole assortment of others related to that. It’s something that should rightfully end up in the Smithsonian.”

The boxes of unanalyzed samples had been preserved and carefully marked, down to the page number where the experiment was described in Miller’s laboratory notebooks.

Miller’s work, modern equipment

The researchers verified that the contents of the box of samples were from an electric discharge experiment conducted with cyanamide in 1958 when Miller was at the biochemistry department of the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University.

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An electric discharge experiment simulates early Earth conditions using relatively simple starting materials. The reaction is ignited by a spark, simulating lightning, which was likely very common on the early Earth.

Georgia Tech graduate student Eric Parker and his current mentor, Professor Facundo M. Fernández, analyzed the 1958 reaction samples.

They conducted liquid chromatography- and mass spectrometry-based analyses and found that the reaction samples from 1958 contained peptides.

The research team then set out to replicate the experiment. Parker, lead author of the study, designed a way to do the experiment using modern equipment and confirmed that the reaction created peptides.

“What we found were some of the same products of polymerization that we found in the original samples,” Parker says. “This corroborated the data that we collected from analyzing the original samples.”

In the experiment from 1958, Stanley Miller had the idea to use the organic compound cyanamide in the reaction. Scientists had previously thought that the reaction with cyanamide would work only in acidic conditions, which likely wasn’t widely available on early Earth.

The new study showed that reactive intermediates produced during the synthesis of amino acids enhanced peptide formation under the basic conditions associated with the spark discharge experiment.

“What we’ve done is shown that you don’t need acid conditions; you just need to have the intermediates involved in amino acid synthesis there, which is very reasonable,” Bada says.

The cyanamide mystery

Why Miller added cyanamide to the reaction will probably stay unknown. Bada can only speculate. In 1958, Miller was at Columbia University in New York City. Researchers at both Columbia and the close-by Rockefeller Institute were at the center of studies on how to analyze and make peptides and proteins in the lab, which had been demonstrated for the first time in 1953 (the same year that Miller published his famous origin of life paper).

Perhaps while having coffee with colleagues someone suggested that cyanamide—a chemical used in the production of pharmaceuticals—might have been available on the early Earth and might help make peptides if added to Miller’s reaction.

“Everybody who would have been there and could verify this is gone, so we’re just left to scratch our heads and say ‘how’d he get this idea before anyone else,'” Bada says.

The latest study is part of an ongoing analysis of Stanley Miller’s old experiments. In 2008, the research team found samples from 1953 that showed a much more efficient synthesis than Stanley published in Science in 1953.

In 2011, the researchers analyzed a 1958 experiment that used hydrogen sulfide as a gas in the electric discharge experiment. The reactions produced a more diverse array of amino acids that had been synthesized in Miller’s famous 1953 study. Eric Parker was the lead author on the 2011 study.

“It’s been an amazing opportunity to work with a piece of scientific history,” Parker says.

The Center for Chemical Evolution at the Georgia Institute of Technology, which is jointly supported by the National Science Foundation and the NASA Astrobiology Program, supported the study, which appears online in the journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition.

The work was primarily a collaboration between UC San Diego and the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. Scientists from NASA’s Johnson Space Center and Goddard Space Flight Center were also involved in the analysis. Any conclusions or opinions are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the sponsoring agencies.

Source: Georgia Tech