Publications by authors named "Sarah E Maurer"

Understanding how membrane forming amphiphiles are synthesized and aggregate in prebiotic settings is required for understanding the origins of life on Earth 4 billion years ago. Amino acids decyl esters were prepared by dehydration of decanol and amino acid as a model for a plausible prebiotic reaction at two temperatures. Fifteen amino acids were tested with a range of side chain chemistries to understand the role of amino acid identity on synthesis and membrane formation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

"Prebiotic soup" often features in discussions of origins of life research, both as a theoretical concept when discussing abiological pathways to modern biochemical building blocks and, more recently, as a feedstock in prebiotic chemistry experiments focused on discovering emergent, systems-level processes such as polymerization, encapsulation, and evolution. However, until now, little systematic analysis has gone into the design of well-justified prebiotic mixtures, which are needed to facilitate experimental replicability and comparison among researchers. This paper explores principles that should be considered in choosing chemical mixtures for prebiotic chemistry experiments by reviewing the natural environmental conditions that might have created such mixtures and then suggests reasonable guidelines for designing recipes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the search for life beyond Earth, distinguishing the living from the non-living is paramount. However, this distinction is often elusive, as the origin of life is likely a stepwise evolutionary process, not a singular event. Regardless of the favored origin of life model, an inherent "grayness" blurs the theorized threshold defining life.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Water has many roles in the context of life on Earth, however throughout the universe, other liquids may be able to support the emergence of life. We looked at the ability of amino acids, peptides, a depsipeptide, and proteins to partition into a non-polar decanol phase, with and without the addition of a phase transfer agent. Partitioning evaluated using UV detection, or with HPLC coupled to either charged aerosol detection or ESI-MS.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Vesicles and other bilayered membranous structures can self-assemble from single hydrocarbon chain amphiphiles. Their formation and stability are highly dependent on experimental conditions such as ionic strength, pH, and temperature. The addition of divalent cations, for example, often results in the disruption of vesicles made of a single fatty acid species through amphiphile precipitation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Covalent or noncovalent surface functionalization of soft-matter structures is an important tool for tailoring their function and stability. Functionalized surfaces and nanoparticles have found numerous applications in drug delivery and diagnostics, and new functionalization chemistry is continuously being developed in the discipline of bottom-up systems chemistry. The association of polar functional molecules, e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Self-assembly is considered one of the driving forces behind abiogenesis and would have been affected by the environmental conditions of early Earth. The formation of membranes is a key step in this process, and unlike large dialkyl membranes of modern cells the first membranes were likely formed from small single-chain amphiphiles, which are environment-sensitive. Fatty acids and their derivatives have been previously characterized in this role without concern for the concentrations of ionic solutes in the suspension.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

One of the essential elements of any cell, including primitive ancestors, is a structural component that protects and confines the metabolism and genes while allowing access to essential nutrients. For the targeted protocell model, bilayers of decanoic acid, a single-chain fatty acid amphiphile, are used as the container. These bilayers interact with a ruthenium-nucleobase complex, the metabolic complex, to convert amphiphile precursors into more amphiphiles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report the use of photoinduced electron transfer to drive reductive cleavage of an ester to produce bilayer-forming molecules; specifically, visible photolysis in a mixture of a decanoic acid ester precursor, hydrogen donor molecules, and a ruthenium-based photocatalyst that employs a linked nucleobase (8-oxo-guanine) as an electron donor generates decanoic acid. The overall transformation of the ester precursor to yield vesicles represents the use of an external energy source to convert nonstructure forming molecules into amphiphiles that spontaneously assemble into vesicles. The core of our chemical reaction system uses an 8-oxo-G-Ru photocatalyst, a derivative of [tris(2,2'-bipyridine)-Ru(II)](2+).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF