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Original Articles

The Possible Role of Cyclic Pentacoordinate Phosphorus Intermediates in the Origin and Evolution of Life. are Phosphoric Anhydride and Trimetaphosphates Prebiotic Reagents?

Pages 2173-2186 | Received 29 May 2015, Accepted 07 Aug 2015, Published online: 10 Dec 2015
 

GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT

Abstract

This mini-review shows that the origin and evolution of life might be governed by a chemical process in which the formation of cyclic pentacoordinated phosphorus intermediates is activated of a factor 106–8 over other similar collateral processes containing acyclic phosphorus compounds. It follows that primordial cyclic phosphorylating reagents such as phosphoric anhydride (P4O10), produced from volcano magma, and its natural derivative trimetaphosphates (TMP) could be used to obtain very important biochemical molecules such as proteins, natural heterocyclic bases, adenosine mono- and triphosphate (AMP and ATP) isomers, etc. very rapidly in prebiotic conditions. In addition, some results demonstrated that it is possible to generate, with high chemio-, regio-, and stereoselectivity, AMPs and their oligonucleotides together with small amounts of ATP, by mixing in a one-pot reaction, D-ribose, adenine, and TMP in aseptic water as a solvent. This process might explain the spontaneous generation of pre-RNA molecules in a primordial Earth and the easy formation of ATP.

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