Premium
Taming the Combinatorial Explosion of the Formose Reaction via Recursion within Mineral Environments
Author(s) -
ColónSantos Stephanie,
Cooper Geoffrey J. T.,
Cronin Leroy
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
chemsystemschem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2570-4206
DOI - 10.1002/syst.201900014
Subject(s) - recursion (computer science) , limiting , combinatorial explosion , chemistry , simple (philosophy) , computer science , combinatorial chemistry , computational chemistry , mathematics , algorithm , combinatorics , mechanical engineering , philosophy , epistemology , engineering
One‐pot reactions of simple precursors, such as those found in the formose reaction or formamide condensation, continuously lead to combinatorial explosions in which simple building blocks capable of function exist, but are in insufficient concentration to self‐organize, adapt, and thus generate complexity. We set out to explore the effect of recursion on such complex mixtures by ‘seeding’ the product mixture into a fresh version of the reaction, with the inclusion of different mineral environments, over a number of reaction cycles. Through untargeted UPLC‐HRMS analysis of the mixtures we found that the overall number of products detected reduces as the number of cycles increases, as a result of recursively enhanced mineral environment selectivity, thus limiting the combinatorial explosion. This discovery demonstrates how the involvement of mineral surfaces with simple reactions could lead to the emergence of some building blocks found in RNA, ribose and uracil, under much simpler conditions that originally thought.