
Most biomolecules occur in mirror, or chiral, images of each other. However, life is homochiral: proteins contain almost exclusively levorotatory (L) amino acids, while only dextrorotatory (R) sugars appear in RNA and DNA. The mechanism behind this fundamental asymmetry of life remains an open problem. Coupling the spatiotemporal evolution of a general autocatalytic polymerization reaction network to external environmental effects, we show through a detailed statistical analysis that high intensity and long duration events may drive achiral initial conditions towards chirality. We argue that life's homochirality resulted from sequential chiral symmetry breaking triggered by environmental events, thus extending the theory of punctuated equilibrium to the prebiotic realm. Applying our arguments to other potentially life-bearing planetary platforms, we predict that a statistically representative sampling will be racemic on average.
13 pages, 4 color figures. Final version published in Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres. Typos corrected, figures improved, and a few definitions and word usage clarified
Evolution, Chemical, Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech), Origin of Life, Astrophysics (astro-ph), FOS: Physical sciences, Stereoisomerism, Astrophysics, Biological Physics (physics.bio-ph), Physics - Biological Physics, Amino Acids, Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
Evolution, Chemical, Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech), Origin of Life, Astrophysics (astro-ph), FOS: Physical sciences, Stereoisomerism, Astrophysics, Biological Physics (physics.bio-ph), Physics - Biological Physics, Amino Acids, Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
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