Abundant extraterrestrial amino acids in the primitive CM carbonaceous chondrite Asuka 12236

Glavin, Daniel P.; McLain, Hannah L.; Dworkin, Jason P.; Parker, Eric T.; Elsila, Jamie E.; Aponte, Jose C.; Simkus, Danielle N.; Pozarycki, Chad, I; Graham, Heather, V; Nittler, Larry R.; Alexander, Conel M. O'D
2020
METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE
DOI
10.1111/maps.13560
The Asuka (A)-12236 meteorite has recently been classified as a CM carbonaceous chondrite of petrologic type 3.0/2.9 and is among the most primitive CM meteorites studied to date. Here, we report the concentrations, relative distributions, and enantiomeric ratios of amino acids in water extracts of the A-12236 meteorite and another primitive CM chondrite Elephant Moraine (EET) 96029 (CM2.7) determined by ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry. EET 96029 was highly depleted in amino acids and dominated by glycine, while a wide diversity of two- to six-carbon aliphatic primary amino acids were identified in A-12236, which had a total amino acid abundance of 360 +/- 18 nmol g(-1), with most amino acids present without hydrolysis (free). The amino acid concentrations of A-12236 were double those previously measured in the CM2.7 Paris meteorite, consistent with A-12236 being a highly primitive and unheated CM chondrite. The high relative abundance of alpha-amino acids in A-12236 is consistent with formation by a Strecker-cyanohydrin dominated synthesis during a limited early aqueous alteration phase on the CM meteorite parent body. The presence of predominantly free glycine, a near racemic mixture of alanine (d/l similar to 0.93-0.96), and elevated abundances of several terrestrially rare non-protein amino acids including alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (alpha-AIB) and racemic isovaline indicate that these amino acids in A-12236 are extraterrestrial in origin. Given a lack of evidence for biological amino acid contamination in A-12236, it is possible that some of thel-enantiomeric excesses (l(ee) similar to 34-64%) of the protein amino acids, aspartic and glutamic acids and serine, are indigenous to the meteorite; however, isotopic measurements are needed for confirmation. In contrast to more aqueously altered CMs of petrologic types <= 2.5, nol-isovaline excesses were detected in A-12236. This observation strengthens the hypothesis that extensive parent body aqueous activity is required to produce or amplify the largel-isovaline excesses that cannot be explained solely by exposure to circularly polarized radiation or other chiral symmetry breaking mechanisms prior to incorporation into the asteroid parent body.