Preferential survival of prebiotic metallopeptides in the presence of ultraviolet light

Abstract

The transition from unregulated, prebiotic chemistry to metabolic-like systems capable of supporting an evolving protocell has remained difficult to explain. One hypothesis is that early catalysts began to prune the chemical landscape in a manner that facilitated the emergence of modern-day enzymes. As enzymes frequently rely on the intrinsic reactivity of metal ions, it follows that these early catalysts may have been metal ions coordinated to prebiotic peptides that have remained as core structures within extant proteins. Here, we demonstrate that UV light directly selects for the types of metal-binding peptide motifs found in biology. This is because bare cysteine is much more susceptible to photolysis than cysteine bound by a metal ion. Therefore, peptides with greater affinity for environmentally available metal ions, such as Fe2+ or Zn2+, are more stable. Our results are supported by mass spectrometry, calorimetry, X-ray absorption, NMR, transient absorption pump probe spectroscopy, and excited-state quantum-chemical calculations. Photostability is due to the ability of the metal ion to engage transiently generated reactive radical centers in a manner that prevents subsequent degradative processes. The data are consistent with the enrichment of a restricted set of high affinity, extant-like metallopeptides in surficial environments on the early Earth.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
20 Mar 2025
Accepted
16 May 2025
First published
20 May 2025
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Preferential survival of prebiotic metallopeptides in the presence of ultraviolet light

D. Rossetto, S. Nader, C. Kufner, G. G. Lozano, L. Cerofolini, M. Fragai, V. Martin-Diaconescu, B. Zambelli, S. Ciurli, G. Guella, R. Szabla, D. D. Sasselov and S. S. Mansy, Chem. Sci., 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5SC02170G

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