According to a study published in Nature Astronomy, scientists analyzing samples from the Hayabusa2 mission have confirmed that all five of the essential building blocks of DNA and RNA, known as nucleobases, exist on the asteroid Ryugu.
This is a fairly big deal as it’s the clearest evidence yet found that the raw ingredients for life aren’t unique to Earth and may be widespread across the universe.
The research team examined milligrams of material collected from the surface and subsurface of Ryugu and found adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, and uracil—molecules that form the genetic code that underpins all known life. Finding them all together in roughly equal proportions is what makes this discovery noteworthy.
Asteroid Ryugu Has All Five Essential of the DNA Building Blocks For Creating Life
While these organic compounds have been found beyond Earth before, previous samples showed imbalances. Ryugu has a more balanced chemical profile, suggesting a shared formation process that may have occurred on a celestial body rich in water.
All this means that the chemistry needed for life might not be rare or even accidental. It could be a natural byproduct of how certain asteroids form and evolve. The overall Takeaway here is that, chemically, space has a lot going on and in ways that mirror the conditions of early Earth.
The big gap in our knowledge remains whether asteroids like this one actually delivered these ingredients to Earth, thus jumpstarting life, or whether this discovery just confirms that the chemistry is happening all over the place all the time.
Either way, it means the building blocks of life aren’t confined to Earth, which suggests that life on Earth may not be a fluke but rather part of a larger, complex pattern of chemicals found throughout the universe. And if it made us, it might have made someone else.
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