Though perhaps better known as the lethal substance taken in pill form by captured spies in cheesy thriller movies, cyanide may have helped life to evolve on Earth. And looking for signs of it on alien planets may help us to locate life elsewhere in the Universe, chemists at Scripps Research have found.
The team have shown that the chemical compound, which contains a carbon atom bonded to a nitrogen atom, could have enabled some of the first metabolic reactions on Earth that created carbon-based compounds from carbon dioxide. Metabolic reactions are reactions that create energy out of food and are essential for sustaining life.
“When we look for signs of life – either on the early Earth or on other planets – we base the search on the biochemistry we know exists in life today. The fact that these same metabolic reactions can be driven by cyanide shows that life can be very different,” said the study’s lead author Dr Ramanarayanan Krishnamurthy, an associate professor of chemistry at Scripps Research.
Read more about life on Earth:
- What’s the oldest species alive on Earth?
- What animal collectively makes up the largest biomass on Earth?
- In what ways are humans making the Earth less habitable?
To make the discovery, the team homed in a set of chemical reactions that combine carbon dioxide and water to create the more complex compounds that are necessary for life known as the reverse tricarboxylic acid, or r-TCA cycle.
The cycle is used by some bacteria that currently exist on Earth, but it relies on the use of complex proteins that hadn’t yet formed on the planet during its infancy 4 billion years ago.
As previous studies have shown that certain metals can trigger the same reactions under extremely hot and highly acidic conditions, the Scripps team had a hunch that another chemical compound may also be able to do so, only under the less extreme conditions seen on the early Earth.
As they already knew that cyanide was present in the atmosphere back then, they mapped out a set of reactions that could potentially use cyanide to produce more complex organic molecules from carbon dioxide and then tested them in the lab.
“It was scary how simple it was,” said Krishnamurthy. “We really didn’t have to do anything special, we mixed together these molecules, waited and the reaction happened spontaneously.”
Although the experiment doesn’t offer conclusive proof that cyanide was involved in this process on the early Earth, it does offer a fresh way of thinking about the origin of life, and perhaps a new means of searching for life on other planets, the researchers say.