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Sunday, November 30, 2008

Molecule of Life... in Space

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According to a recent article from WIRED a sugar molecule linked to the origin of life was discovered in a potentially habitable region of our galaxy. I'm not sure how exactly they can prove what type a molecule is from across the stars... but if they are right then it is pretty interesting.


Example

You can find the entire article by clicking HERE



Glycolaldehyde (HOCH2-CH=O) is the smallest possible molecule that contains both an aldehyde group and a hydroxyl group. It is the only possible diose, a 2-carbon monosaccharide, although a diose is not strictly a saccharide. It is the simplest possible sugar.

Glycolaldehyde is an intermediate in the formose reaction.
Glycolaldehyde forms from many precursors, including the amino acid glycine. It can form by action of ketolase on fructose 1,6-bisphosphate in an alternate glycolysis pathway. This compound is transferred by thiamine pyrophosphate during the pentose phosphate shunt.

In purine catabolism, xanthine is first converted to urate. This is converted to 5-hydroxyisourate, which decarboxylates to allantoin and allantoic acid. After hydrolyzing one urea, this leaves glycolureate. After hydrolyzing the second urea, glycolaldehyde is left. Two glycolaldehydes condense to form erythrose 4-phosphate, which goes to the pentose phosphate shunt again.

---Source-Wikipedia

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