Discovery of important DNA base in asteroids


An early life hypothesis on Earth states that the basic elements of life have reached Earth from far away. New research has now found further evidence in its favor, as all the essential bases of DNA have been found in a meteorite.

Scientists at the University of Hokkaido in Japan have said in a highly sensitive study that they have discovered the most basic building blocks of RNA and DNA in asteroids. Scientists have been studying for many years the Merchison meteorite that fell in Australia in 1969, the Murray meteorite found in Kentucky in 1950 and the Tagus Lake meteorite found in British Columbia in 2000. All of these meteors are very ancient and must have formed at the time of the formation of the solar system.

All three have a wealth of organic matter and are rich in carbon. They contain, in particular, the basis of DNA that combines to form DNA, and DNA is the most basic and important unit of life.

Remember that there are two types of nucleus bases, the first is pyorrhoea and the second is pyrimidine, and now after careful use of new technology, scientists have discovered pyramidines in celestial bodies. Many types of nucleus bases have been observed from the first Merchishan meteor Saqib.

Assume that DNA has four bases or bases which include adenine, guanine, cytosine and thymine which are abbreviated as A, G, T, C. Experts have found traces of thymine, cytosine and uracil in a rock.

On this basis, it can be said that in the beginning of the solar system, there were meteorites and other bodies rich in organic matter. That is why these components form the core of DNA and form a double ladder of DNA.

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