TechAsteroid Bennu reveals life's building blocks from space

Asteroid Bennu reveals life's building blocks from space

In the samples from the asteroid Bennu, scientists discovered numerous organic compounds, including key amino acids, as well as DNA and RNA components. This finding suggests that the chemical building blocks of life might have been commonly present in the early solar system. The first asteroids may have "delivered" these building blocks to Earth.

NASA probe collecting samples from asteroid Bennu (visualization)
NASA probe collecting samples from asteroid Bennu (visualization)
Images source: © NASA
Amanda Grzmiel

A team of researchers studying samples from the asteroid Bennu identified numerous organic molecules, including important ingredients of life. According to NASA, these key samples were collected by the OSIRIS-REx probe, which was launched in 2016. The probe gathered dust, soil, and rocks from the asteroid and returned them to Earth in 2023. Research on these samples has been ongoing. Here are the key findings.

What did the asteroid formed 4.5 billion years ago conceal?

Bennu is an asteroid discovered in 1999 that particularly interests scientists due to its age and composition. Considered potentially hazardous to Earth, it formed about 4.5 billion years ago, at the beginning of the solar system's formation. Thanks to the NASA mission, samples were delivered to Earth, serving as a "cosmic time capsule" offering insights into the early stages of our planetary system's development.

Data from the analysis of samples from Bennu were published in the journal "Nature" and "Nature Astronomy". The research revealed that the samples contained thousands of organic compounds. The most crucial among them include:

  • Amino acids – Thirty-three different amino acids were identified, including 14 of the 20 standard proteinogenic amino acids, which are the basic building blocks of proteins. They are crucial because they combine to form proteins that perform many vital functions in organisms, including catalyzing chemical reactions, transporting molecules, and forming cellular structures.
  • Nitrogenous bases – All five nitrogenous bases that make up DNA and RNA were detected in the samples: adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine, and uracil. They are fundamental for storing and transmitting genetic information, which is essential for the functioning and reproduction of organisms.
  • Additionally, 19 non-proteinogenic amino acids were also detected, which are rare or not present in Earth biology.

Researchers believe all these molecules found on Bennu are necessary for life formation. The fact that they are present on the asteroid suggests that life might have originated somewhere in space and arrived on Earth. It might not necessarily have been formed through living organisms but through chemical processes on the asteroid itself.

  • Opening of NASA's OSIRIS REx asteroid sample return capsule
  • Opening of NASA's OSIRIS REx asteroid sample return lid
  • Opening of NASA's OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample return capsule cover
  • Opening of NASA's OSIRIS REx asteroid sample return lid
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[1/5] Opening of NASA's OSIRIS REx asteroid sample return capsuleImages source: © NASA | NASA/Keegan Barber

The first asteroids might have "delivered" life to Earth

Although scientists did not find evidence of life on Bennu, their findings support the hypothesis that asteroids that fell on Earth in its early days might have brought essential ingredients for life. Discoveries also suggest that life might have existed on other planets and moons in the solar system.

Similar organic molecules, including amino acids, have been detected in meteorites before. According to scientists, the samples from Bennu are unique because they were not contaminated during their passage through the atmosphere. Unlike meteorites, which often undergo Earth's conditions, these directly retrieved samples from the asteroid are a valuable "time capsule" from the early solar system.

The asteroid also holds a lot of ammonia and remnants of water

In Bennu's samples, scientists discovered some surprises, including very high concentrations of ammonia—about 100 times greater than in soils on Earth. Ammonia is a key component of many biological processes, including the production of amino acids that can form proteins. Additionally, traces of 11 minerals were found, which are part of brines formed during the evaporation of water on Bennu and its parent asteroid.

Tim McCoy from the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, cited by NASA, indicated that the salt left after evaporation resembles the sodium structures found in places on Earth like Searles Lake in California. McCoy noted that the raw ingredients for life on Bennu combined in interesting and complex ways, which might be considered another step towards life. Similar brines may exist on the moon Enceladus and the dwarf planet Ceres.

Previously, scientists, after initial analyses of Bennu's samples in 2023, pointed to the presence of carbon and water enclosed in clay minerals. The current analysis results are even more surprising. Scientists emphasize that further research is needed to understand why life arose on one planet or moon and not others. Jason Dworkin of NASA pointed out that there remains the question of what Bennu lacked compared to Earth, and this will be the next research area for astrobiologists around the world.