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-------Original Message-------
 
From: sunny
Date: 08/19/09 10:09:10
To: Undisclosed-Recipient:,
Subject: [inti-net] Nasa finds traces of amino acid Glycine in tail of comet
 
  http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,25951091-2703,00.html

Nasa finds traces of amino acid Glycine in tail of comet
Mark Henderson | August 19, 2009 

Article from: The Times 
A FUNDAMENTAL building block of biology has been discovered in wisps of
stardust from the tail of a comet, offering fresh evidence that life on
Earth could have begun from matter that arrived on our planet from space.

New analysis of tiny particles captured by the Stardust comet-chasing probe
has revealed for the first time the presence of traces of an amino acid
called glycine, a basic component of proteins without which life as we know
it could not exist. 

The discovery, by Nasa scientists, supports a theory that the raw material
from which life began first formed in space, and was carried to Earth by
comets that crashed into the planet. It also means that other planets are
likely to have been seeded with amino acids from comets in a similar fashion
 suggesting that extraterrestrial life may well have evolved elsewhere in
the Universe and could even be common. 

"Glycine is an amino acid used by living organisms to make proteins, and
this is the first time an amino acid has been found in a comet," said Jamie
Elsila, of Nasa's Goddard Space Flight Centre in Maryland, who led the
research. "Our discovery supports the theory that some of life's ingredients
formed in space and were delivered to Earth long ago by meteorite and comet
impacts." 

Carl Pilcher, director of the Nasa Astrobiology Institute, said: "The
discovery of glycine in a comet supports the idea that the fundamental
building blocks of life are prevalent in space, and strengthens the argument
that life in the Universe may be common rather than rare." 

The discovery is the latest to come from Nasa's unmanned Stardust mission,
which flew through the cloud of dust and debris trailing the Wild 2 comet on
January 2, 2004. 

Millions of tiny particles from the comet's tail were captured by a grid
filled with aerogel, a super-light, sponge-like material sometimes nicknamed
"frozen smoke" because 99 per cent of its volume is empty space. 

A capsule containing the collection grid detached from the spacecraft soon
after its close encounter with Wild 2 and returned to Earth, where it
parachuted to the surface on January 15, 2006. Scientists have since been
examining the contents of the capsule for clues about the early solar system
 

All forms of life on Earth rely on proteins, which drive chemical reactions
in their cells and form many of the structural elements around which
organisms are built. This huge variety of proteins are all made up of chains
of 20 amino acids. 

The origin of amino acids has long been debated among scientists, with some
favouring the view that they emerged in the primordial soup of the planet's
youth, and others proposing that they formed in space and came here on
comets and meteorites. 

The discovery of glycine in the Stardust samples points towards an
extraterrestrial origin for at least one of the 20 amino acids. 

Dr Elsila's team first identified traces of glycine last year, in particles
removed both from the aerogel and aluminium foil around it. As glycine is
also present on Earth, however, the scientists had to confirm that it
originated from space. The team used isotopic analysis to examine the
chemical composition of the glycine. Many elements occur in different
isotopes, or versions, which have different masses. 

"We discovered that the Stardust-returned glycine has an extraterrestrial
carbon isotope signature, indicating that it originated on the comet," Dr
Elsisa said. 

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