Newly developed methodology breaks molecular symmetry to back one theory about life's origin

by

Editors' notes

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

fact-checked

peer-reviewed publication

trusted source

proofread

Graphical Abstract. Credit: Angewandte Chemie International Edition (2024). DOI: 10.1002/anie.202411232

The vast majority of organic molecules (based on a carbon structure) are not flat, but have a three-dimensional geometry. Various results can be obtained depending on the way the atoms are arranged inside each molecule. In some cases, a molecule and its mirror image may have completely different properties; we are talking about two symmetric molecules that have the same relationship that an object has with its image in a mirror.

Let's use the comparison of hands to explain it: our hands are mirror images of each other; one may think that they are identical. However, when one hand is placed on top of the other (not in a palm-to-palm arrangement, but with one hand overlapping the other), the position of the fingers is not the same. The same thing occurs with certain molecules: the organization of the atoms does not coincide. Each of the mirror images of a molecule that is not superimposable is called an enantiomer.

"In nature and in pharmacology there are multiple examples in which the two enantiomers have different properties. A case in point is thalidomide (a drug administered as a sedative and to relieve nausea during the first three months of pregnancy and which caused thousands of cases of congenital malformations). One of the enantiomers of thalidomide has analgesic properties and the other causes malformations," explained Efraim Reyes, a UPV/EHU Ph.D. holder.

"This is because therapeutic targets do not interact in the same way with one enantiomer or the other. So it is essential to control the synthesis of these types of molecules in order to obtain only one of the two enantiomers."

The Metal Catalysis and Organocatalysis Research Group led by UPV/EHU professor José Luis Vicario has succeeded, in collaboration with the Rovira i Virgili University, in selectively constructing one of the two enantiomers of a group of cyclobutanes (molecules that basically contain carbon and hydrogen atoms, connected in the form of a ring).

The team's work appears in Angewandte Chemie International Edition.

A UPV/EHU pre-doctoral researcher, Josebe Hurtado has been able to "synthesize molecules with an elusive asymmetry using a novel methodology that opens up a new path towards a hitherto unattained type of molecular structure, which could potentially be used as drugs, among other things."

"By means of a desymmetrization process that breaks the planar symmetry, we have converted them into elementary synthetic blocks of more complex molecules," explained her thesis supervisor Reyes, one of the lead authors of the work.

This group at the UPV/EHU's Faculty of Science and Technology has succeeded in synthesizing intrinsically asymmetric cyclic molecules (in the form of a ring) by means of catalysis.

"Using small quantities of a catalyst derived from copper, an abundant, innocuous metal, we developed an efficient, direct methodology," pointed out the UPV/EHU Professor of Organic Chemistry.

This achievement addresses a current major challenge and an area of research of growing interest.

"We have managed to synthesize molecules with axial asymmetry (supported on an axis), which is unprecedented in nature and which opens the door to the study of a new type of molecule, which can also be used to develop new therapeutic pathways," added Vicario.

Furthermore, by strictly controlling the reactions, "we have broken the planar symmetry to convert it into axial asymmetry and then into point asymmetry (supported on a point)," explained the UPV/EHU professor. This shows "that there is a real possibility that biomolecules with asymmetry may also have a shared origin."

Spontaneous desymmetrization, the origin of life

This finding is reminiscent of one of the theories relating to the origin of life, which is based on the assumption that the molecules that gave rise to life were formed through the spontaneous desymmetrization of symmetry.

"According to one of the widely held theories about the origin of life, there were only symmetrical molecules originally and that asymmetrical molecules emerged through a process of spontaneous desymmetrization; they obviously constitute the origin of life, because our entire organism and living systems are based on biomolecules that are asymmetrical and only contain one of the two enantiomers," Reyes concluded.

More information: Josebe Hurtado et al, Cu‐Catalyzed Enantioselective Borylative Desymmetrization of 1‐Vinyl Cyclobutanols and Axial‐to‐Point Chirality Transfer in a Diastereoconvergent/Stereoretentive Allylation Scenery, Angewandte Chemie International Edition (2024). DOI: 10.1002/anie.202411232

Journal information: Angewandte Chemie International Edition

Provided by University of the Basque Country