The ongoing exploration of planets such as Mars is producing a wealth of data to define habitable environments beyond the Earth.
The inferred presence of neutral to alkaline aqueous fluids on Mars in its early history suggests that many potentially habitable environments existed on the planet. Terrestrial analogues with similar chemical and physical properties are being explored and characterized in order to assess their suitability for triggering the Origin of Life on Mars. Recently, a novel Mars analogue site has been identified in the Bagno dell’Acqua Lake, which is located in the island of Pantelleria in Sicily (Italy).
We report here that microbialite from the Bagno dell’Acqua Lake acts as an efficient catalyst for prebiotic processes, starting from a ternary mixture of well-recognized chemical precursors, including ammonium formate, diaminomalonitrile, and alpha-amino acids. Under thermal conditions, significant amounts of building blocks of both RNA and PNA were obtained.
Furthermore, samples of the water from the Bagno dell’Acqua Lake have been found to promote the polymerization of the H-form of 3′,5′-cyclic GMP, resulting in the generation of RNA oligomers of up to 15 units in length.
The “Bagno dell’Acqua” Lake as a Novel Mars-like Analogue: Prebiotic Syntheses of PNA and RNA Building Blocks and Oligomers, International Journal of Molecular Sciences (open access)
Astrobiology,