An origin of Earth life on Mars would resolve significant inconsistencies between the inferred history of life and Earth’s geologic history. Life as we know it utilizes amino acids, nucleic acids, and lipids for the metabolic, informational, and compartment-forming subsystems of a cell. Such building blocks may have formed simultaneously from cyanosulfidic chemical precursors in a planetary surface scenario involving ultraviolet light, wet-dry cycling, and volcanism. However, early Earth was a water world, and the timing of the rise of oxygen on Earth is inconsistent with final fixation of the genetic code in response to oxidative stress. A cyanosulfidic origin of life could have taken place on Mars via photoredox chemistry, facilitated by orders of magnitude more sub-aerial crust than early Earth, and an earlier transition to oxidative conditions. Meteoritic bombardment may have generated transient habitable environments and ejected and transferred life to Earth. The Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover offers an unprecedented opportunity to confirm or refute evidence consistent with a cyanosulfidic origin of life on Mars, search for evidence of ancient life, and constrain the evolution of Mars’ oxidation state over time.
In a paper published on the arXiv database at Cornell University on 4 February 2021, Christopher Carr of the Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering and School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology, examines the current evidence for a Martian origin of life on Earth, and ways in which we can look for evidence to support or disprove this hypothesis.
Life as we know it utilises amino acids, nucleic acids, and lipids for the metabolic, informational, and compartment-forming subsystems of a cell. Such building blocks may have formed simultaneously from cyanosulfidic chemical precursors in a planetary surface scenario involving ultraviolet light, wet-dry cycling, and volcanism. This process can be driven by photoredox chemistry with sulphite mediating cycling of ferrocyanide and ferricyanide in combination with ultraviolet irradiation. While this scenario does not rule out other models such as an origin of life at seafloor vents, it plausibly and simultaneously addresses key challenges including formation and concentration of organic building blocks, their polymerisation to yield functional molecules, and compartmentalisation to yield proto-cellular entities.
All life as we know it shares a common ancestor. The most conserved genome regions occur within genes encoding the translation machinery (16S and 23S ribosomal subunits, transfer RNAs), which are themselves RNA machines involved in translating RNAs to polypeptides via the genetic code. These regions have changed little over 4 billion years. The deep evolutionary conservation of these molecular fossils is one piece of evidence for an RNA-Protein world preceding the DNA world. Furthermore, RNA molecules are capable of both storing hereditary information as well as catalyzing reactions, a dual role that may have been critical before the emergence of translation and the fixation of the genetic code. Protocell-like growth and division, for example, mediated by feedstock supply and/or photochemical processes could facilitate compartmentalization, selection, and evolution in the context of an RNA-Protein world.
Genetic evidence suggests that the Last Universal Common Ancestor, which shares many features with modern life and was evolutionarily distant from its origin, inhabited an anoxic, 'geochemically active environment rich in hydrogen, carbon dioxide and iron. However, this setting on its own does not distinguish between sea floor vents and shallow-water hydrothermal habitats, nor between Earth and Mars.
Life as we know it utilises dehydration synthesis to form the metabolic (protein, carbohydrate), informational (nucleic acid), and compartment-forming (lipid) polymers. Driving forces for dehydration include evaporation, sublimation, crystallisation, or formation of hydrated minerals. Surface conditions thus offer plausible mechanisms to concentrate pre-biotic molecules and produce polymers. Dehydration could possibly occur due to nanoconfinement in metal sulphides at alkaline vents, yet, at present, high water activity does not seem consistent with an origin of life.
The cyanosulphidic origin theory is compelling, yet current data suggests that the early Earth was a water world with little to no sub-aerial continental crust before 3.5 billion years ago, reaching 1-2% land by 3.0 billion years ago, and 5-8% by 2.5 billion years ago. Consistent with these findings, recent analysis suggests initiation of continental weathering between 3 and 2.5 billion years ago.This would have limited the land area suitable for a cyanosulphidic origin of life to regions such as volcanic island hot spots.
Estimates of the water inventory on Mars at the Noachian/Hesperian boundary (about 3.7 billion years ago) range from tens of meters to about1 km global equivalent layer. The upper bound assumes a putative northern ocean after formation of the Martian dichotomy, e.g. the Borealis basin resulting from a massive impact event at or before 4.2 billion years ago and possibly as old as 4.5 billion years ago. Even in the most extreme scenarios, Mars would have had orders of magnitude more land area than early Earth.
Additional support for a Mars origin of life on Earth comes from amino acids and the evolution of the genetic code itself. In 2017 Matthias Granold, Parvana Hajieva, Monica Ioana Toşa, Florin-Dan Irimie, and Bernd Moosmann, proposed that the genetic code used a simpler set of amino acids and that the final diversification of amino acids happened in response to oxygen, suggesting that the diversification was late, e.g. coincident with the appearance of early local oxygen on Earth. It this hypothesis is correct, it would imply exposure to oxidizing conditions on the early Earth. However, the geologic record has revealed that Earth was largely devoid of oxygen for its first 2+ billion years, and appreciable quantities only accumulated after Cyanobacteria invented oxygenic photosynthesis, resulting in the Great Oxidation Event.
While the Great Oxidation Event occurred around 2.33 billion years ago, evidence for early local oxidative weathering suggests there could have been transient local oxygen pulses at or before 3 billion years ago. Nevertheless, the late diversification is problematic because the root of the Archaeal phylum Euryarchaeota, which arose after the Last Universal Common Ancestor, has been dated to more than 4 billion years ago, and the genetic code must have been fully established before this time including use of selenocysteine by the Last Universal Common Ancestor. Time-calibrated phylogenomics extending this deep into life’s history comes with caveats and wide error bars, yet it highlights a more than 1.5 billion year inconsistency. Thus, the timing of the fixation of the genetic code does not align with the inferred oxidation state of the early Earth. However, on Mars, surface conditions became oxidising much earlier.
Today Mars is dry and cold, yet early Mars was habitable for life as we know it, with significantly more water; availability of the main elements used by life (carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulphur) and energy sources including variable redox states of iron and sulphur minerals are recorded in the stratigraphy of Gale Crater. Widespread clay minerals confirm extensive periods of subsurface water-rock interactions before 3.7 billion years ago, yet also suggest even early Mars had mostly cold and relatively arid surface conditions, which could have aided accumulation of organic molecules through concentration and low hydrolysis rates.
In 2020 Dimitar Sasselov, John Grotzinger, and John Sutherland delineated a plausible pathway for a cyanosulphidic origin of life on early Mars. They suggest that igneous intrusions, volcanism, or impacts interacting with cyanide salt deposits could have generated the relevant feedstocks to produce nucleotide, amino acid, and lipid precursors. Carr also suggests a Mars cyanosulphidic origin of life could have seeded life on Earth, resolving the inconsistencies previously noted for an Earth origin of life on Earth.
Lightning would have provided hydrogen cyanide, representing a total fixed nitrogen budget on par with that of the early Earth. Meteorite impacts may also have generated hydrogen cyanide and provided phosphate. Sulphite would likely have been available on early Mars as a consequence of volcanic sulphur dioxide, a carbon dioxide atmosphere, and low temperatures; later oxidation would have led to the formation of sulphate minerals, consistent with remote sensing and in situ measurements. The presence of sulphites would also help to explain the relative dearth of carbonates on Mars.
A cyanosulphidic origin of life would produce all the building blocks required for an RNA-protein world. What is still lacking is knowledge about whether ancient Mars, especially before the Noachian-Hesperian boundary, was conducive to the formation, stabilisation, and evolution of an RNA-Protein world and ultimately cellular life.
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