Thioester synthesis through geoelectrochemical CO 2 fixation on Ni sulfides.
Norio KitadaiRyuhei NakamuraMasahiro YamamotoSatoshi OkadaWataru TakahagiYuko NakanoYoshio TakahashiKen TakaiYoshi OonoPublished in: Communications chemistry (2021)
A prevailing scenario of the origin of life postulates thioesters as key intermediates in protometabolism, but there is no experimental support for the prebiotic CO 2 fixation routes to thioesters. Here we demonstrate that, under a simulated geoelectrochemical condition in primordial ocean hydrothermal systems (-0.6 to -1.0 V versus the standard hydrogen electrode), nickel sulfide (NiS) gradually reduces to Ni 0 , while accumulating surface-bound carbon monoxide (CO) due to CO 2 electroreduction. The resultant partially reduced NiS realizes thioester (S-methyl thioacetate) formation from CO and methanethiol even at room temperature and neutral pH with the yield up to 35% based on CO. This thioester formation is not inhibited, or even improved, by 50:50 coprecipitation of NiS with FeS or CoS (the maximum yields; 27 or 56%, respectively). Such a simple thioester synthesis likely occurred in Hadean deep-sea vent environments, setting a stage for the autotrophic origin of life.