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Dive into the research topics where Michael P. Callahan is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael P. Callahan.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Carbonaceous meteorites contain a wide range of extraterrestrial nucleobases

Michael P. Callahan; Karen E. Smith; H. James Cleaves; Josef Ruzicka; Jennifer C. Stern; Daniel P. Glavin; Christopher H. House; Jason P. Dworkin

All terrestrial organisms depend on nucleic acids (RNA and DNA), which use pyrimidine and purine nucleobases to encode genetic information. Carbon-rich meteorites may have been important sources of organic compounds required for the emergence of life on the early Earth; however, the origin and formation of nucleobases in meteorites has been debated for over 50 y. So far, the few nucleobases reported in meteorites are biologically common and lacked the structural diversity typical of other indigenous meteoritic organics. Here, we investigated the abundance and distribution of nucleobases and nucleobase analogs in formic acid extracts of 12 different meteorites by liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. The Murchison and Lonewolf Nunataks 94102 meteorites contained a diverse suite of nucleobases, which included three unusual and terrestrially rare nucleobase analogs: purine, 2,6-diaminopurine, and 6,8-diaminopurine. In a parallel experiment, we found an identical suite of nucleobases and nucleobase analogs generated in reactions of ammonium cyanide. Additionally, these nucleobase analogs were not detected above our parts-per-billion detection limits in any of the procedural blanks, control samples, a terrestrial soil sample, and an Antarctic ice sample. Our results demonstrate that the purines detected in meteorites are consistent with products of ammonium cyanide chemistry, which provides a plausible mechanism for their synthesis in the asteroid parent bodies, and strongly supports an extraterrestrial origin. The discovery of new nucleobase analogs in meteorites also expands the prebiotic molecular inventory available for constructing the first genetic molecules.


Science | 2011

Origin and Evolution of Prebiotic Organic Matter As Inferred from the Tagish Lake Meteorite

C. D. K. Herd; Alexandra I. Blinova; Danielle N. Simkus; Yongsong Huang; Rafael Tarozo; Conel M. Od. Alexander; Frank Gyngard; Larry R. Nittler; George D. Cody; Marilyn L. Fogel; Yoko Kebukawa; A. L. David Kilcoyne; Robert W. Hilts; Greg F. Slater; Daniel P. Glavin; Jason P. Dworkin; Michael P. Callahan; Jamie E. Elsila; Bradley T. De Gregorio; Rhonda M. Stroud

The study of organic matter in a well-preserved meteorite provides insight into processes that affected its parent asteroids. The complex suite of organic materials in carbonaceous chondrite meteorites probably originally formed in the interstellar medium and/or the solar protoplanetary disk, but was subsequently modified in the meteorites’ asteroidal parent bodies. The mechanisms of formation and modification are still very poorly understood. We carried out a systematic study of variations in the mineralogy, petrology, and soluble and insoluble organic matter in distinct fragments of the Tagish Lake meteorite. The variations correlate with indicators of parent body aqueous alteration. At least some molecules of prebiotic importance formed during the alteration.


Meteoritics & Planetary Science | 2010

The Effects of Parent Body Processes on Amino Acids in Carbonaceous Chondrites

Daniel P. Glavin; Michael P. Callahan; Jason P. Dworkin; Jamie E. Elsila

To investigate the effect of parent body processes on the abundance, distribution, and enantiomeric composition of amino acids in carbonaceous chondrites, the water extracts from nine different powdered CI, CM, and CR carbonaceous chondrites were analyzed for amino acids by ultra performance liquid chromatography-fluorescence detection and time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UPLC-FD ⁄ ToF-MS). Four aqueously altered type 1 carbonaceous chondrites including Orgueil (CI1), Meteorite Hills (MET) 01070 (CM1), Scott Glacier (SCO) 06043 (CM1), and Grosvenor Mountains (GRO) 95577 (CR1) were analyzed using this technique for the first time. Analyses of these meteorites revealed low levels of two- to five-carbon acyclic amino alkanoic acids with concentrations ranging from approximately 1 to 2,700 parts-per-billion (ppb). The type 1 carbonaceous chondrites have a distinct distribution of the five-carbon (C5) amino acids with much higher relative abundances of the c- and d-amino acids compared to the type 2 and type 3 carbonaceous chondrites, which are dominated by a-amino acids. Much higher amino acid abundances were found in the CM2 chondrites Murchison, Lonewolf Nunataks (LON) 94102, and Lewis Cliffs (LEW) 90500, the CR2 Elephant Moraine (EET) 92042, and the CR3 Queen Alexandra Range (QUE) 99177. For example, a-aminoisobutyric acid (a-AIB) and isovaline were approximately 100 to 1000 times more abundant in the type 2 and 3 chondrites compared to the more aqueously altered type 1 chondrites. Most of the chiral amino acids identified in these meteorites were racemic, indicating an extraterrestrial abiotic origin. However, nonracemic isovaline was observed in the aqueously altered carbonaceous chondrites Murchison, Orgueil, SCO 06043, and GRO 95577 with l-isovaline excesses ranging from approximately 11 to 19%, whereas the most pristine, unaltered carbonaceous chondrites analyzed in this study had no detectable l-isovaline excesses. These results are consistent with the theory that aqueous alteration played an important role in amplification of small initial left handed isovaline excesses on the parent bodies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Primordial synthesis of amines and amino acids in a 1958 Miller H2S-rich spark discharge experiment

Eric T. Parker; Henderson James Cleaves; Jason P. Dworkin; Daniel P. Glavin; Michael P. Callahan; Andrew D. Aubrey; Antonio Lazcano; Jeffrey L. Bada

Archived samples from a previously unreported 1958 Stanley Miller electric discharge experiment containing hydrogen sulfide (H2S) were recently discovered and analyzed using high-performance liquid chromatography and time-of-flight mass spectrometry. We report here the detection and quantification of primary amine-containing compounds in the original sample residues, which were produced via spark discharge using a gaseous mixture of H2S, CH4, NH3, and CO2. A total of 23 amino acids and 4 amines, including 7 organosulfur compounds, were detected in these samples. The major amino acids with chiral centers are racemic within the accuracy of the measurements, indicating that they are not contaminants introduced during sample storage. This experiment marks the first synthesis of sulfur amino acids from spark discharge experiments designed to imitate primordial environments. The relative yield of some amino acids, in particular the isomers of aminobutyric acid, are the highest ever found in a spark discharge experiment. The simulated primordial conditions used by Miller may serve as a model for early volcanic plume chemistry and provide insight to the possible roles such plumes may have played in abiotic organic synthesis. Additionally, the overall abundances of the synthesized amino acids in the presence of H2S are very similar to the abundances found in some carbonaceous meteorites, suggesting that H2S may have played an important role in prebiotic reactions in early solar system environments.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011

Conformational Structure of Tyrosine, Tyrosyl-Glycine, and Tyrosyl-Glycyl-Glycine by Double Resonance Spectroscopy

Ali Abo-Riziq; Louis Grace; Bridgit Crews; Michael P. Callahan; Tanja van Mourik; Mattanjah S. de Vries

We investigated the variation in conformation for the amino acid tyrosine (Y), alone and in the small peptides tyrosine-glycine (YG) and tyrosine-glycine-glycine (YGG), in the gas phase by using UV-UV and IR-UV double resonance spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations. For tyrosine we found seven different conformations, for YG we found four different conformations, and for YGG we found three different conformations. As the peptides get larger, we observe fewer stable conformers, despite the increasing complexity and number of degrees of freedom. We find structural trends similar to those in phenylalanine-glycine-glycine (FGG) and tryptophan-glycine-glycine (WGG); however, the effect of dispersive forces in FGG for stabilizing a folded structure is replaced by that of hydrogen bonding in YGG.


Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 2011

Prebiotic Synthesis of Methionine and Other Sulfur-Containing Organic Compounds on the Primitive Earth: A Contemporary Reassessment Based on an Unpublished 1958 Stanley Miller Experiment

Eric T. Parker; H. James Cleaves; Michael P. Callahan; Jason P. Dworkin; Daniel P. Glavin; Antonio Lazcano; Jeffrey L. Bada

Original extracts from an unpublished 1958 experiment conducted by the late Stanley L. Miller were recently found and analyzed using modern state-of-the-art analytical methods. The extracts were produced by the action of an electric discharge on a mixture of methane (CH4), hydrogen sulfide (H2S), ammonia (NH3), and carbon dioxide (CO2). Racemic methionine was formed in significant yields, together with other sulfur-bearing organic compounds. The formation of methionine and other compounds from a model prebiotic atmosphere that contained H2S suggests that this type of synthesis is robust under reducing conditions, which may have existed either in the global primitive atmosphere or in localized volcanic environments on the early Earth. The presence of a wide array of sulfur-containing organic compounds produced by the decomposition of methionine and cysteine indicates that in addition to abiotic synthetic processes, degradation of organic compounds on the primordial Earth could have been important in diversifying the inventory of molecules of biochemical significance not readily formed from other abiotic reactions, or derived from extraterrestrial delivery.


Astrobiology | 2011

Distribution and Stable Isotopic Composition of Amino Acids from Fungal Peptaibiotics: Assessing the Potential for Meteoritic Contamination

Jamie E. Elsila; Michael P. Callahan; Daniel P. Glavin; Jason P. Dworkin; Hans Brückner

The presence of nonprotein α-dialkyl-amino acids such as α-aminoisobutyric acid (α-AIB) and isovaline (Iva), which are considered to be relatively rare in the terrestrial biosphere, has long been used as an indication of the indigeneity of meteoritic amino acids. However, recent work showing the presence of α-AIB and Iva in peptides produced by a widespread group of filamentous fungi indicates the possibility of a terrestrial biotic source for the α-AIB observed in some meteorites. We measured the amino acid distribution and stable carbon and nitrogen isotopic composition of four α-AIB-containing fungal peptides and compared this data to similar meteoritic measurements. We show that the relatively simple distribution of the C(4) and C(5) amino acids in fungal peptides is distinct from the complex distribution observed in many carbonaceous chondrites. We also identify potentially diagnostic relationships between the stable isotopic compositions of pairs of amino acids from the fungal peptides that may aid in ruling out fungal contamination as a source of meteoritic amino acids.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2007

IR-UV double resonance spectroscopy of xanthine.

Michael P. Callahan; Bridgit Crews; Ali Abo-Riziq; Louis Grace; Mattanjah S. de Vries; Zsolt Gengeliczki; Tiffani M. Holmes; Glake Hill

We present resonant two-photon ionization (R2PI), UV-UV, and IR-UV double resonance spectra of xanthine seeded in a supersonic jet by laser desorption. We show that there is only one tautomer of xanthine which absorbs in the wavelength range of 36 700 to 37 700 cm(-1). The IR-UV double resonance spectrum shows three strong bands at 3444, 3485, and 3501 cm(-1), all of which we assign as N-H stretching vibrations. Comparison of the IR-UV double resonance spectrum with frequencies and intensities obtained from density functional theory (DFT) and second order Møller Plesset (MP2) calculations suggests that the observed xanthine is the diketo N(7)H tautomer.


Molecular Physics | 2005

Conformational analysis of cyclo(Phe-Ser) by UV–UV and IR–UV double resonance spectroscopy and ab initio calculations

Ali Abo-Riziq; Bridgit Crews; John E. Bushnell; Michael P. Callahan; Mattanjah S. de Vries

We present the resonant two-photon ionization (R2PI) spectra as well as the UV–UV and IR–UV double resonance spectra for the cyclic dipeptide Phe-Ser. The R2PI spectrum shows five strong transitions in the region of 37 500–37 900 cm−1. By performing UV–UV double resonance spectroscopy, we distinguished 5 different conformers. For each of these conformers, the origin is the most intense transition. In addition, we performed IR–UV double resonance measurements in the region 3200–3800 cm−1 to analyse the NH and OH modes of each conformer. We compared the measured IR spectra to frequencies from ab initio calculations to assign each conformational structure. We found two structures in which the hydroxyl group of the serine residue forms a strong hydrogen bond with the carboxyl group of the same residue. One structure shows only a weak hydrogen bond and for the remaining two structures, the hydroxyl group is ‘free’.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Beginning of viniculture in France

Patrick E. McGovern; Benjamin P. Luley; Nuria Rovira; Armen Mirzoian; Michael P. Callahan; Karen E. Smith; Gretchen R. Hall; Theodore Davidson; Joshua M. Henkin

Chemical analyses of ancient organic compounds absorbed into the pottery fabrics of imported Etruscan amphoras (ca. 500–475 B.C.) and into a limestone pressing platform (ca. 425–400 B.C.) at the ancient coastal port site of Lattara in southern France provide the earliest biomolecular archaeological evidence for grape wine and viniculture from this country, which is crucial to the later history of wine in Europe and the rest of the world. The data support the hypothesis that export of wine by ship from Etruria in central Italy to southern Mediterranean France fueled an ever-growing market and interest in wine there, which, in turn, as evidenced by the winepress, led to transplantation of the Eurasian grapevine and the beginning of a Celtic industry in France. Herbal and pine resin additives to the Etruscan wine point to the medicinal role of wine in antiquity, as well as a means of preserving it during marine transport.

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Jason P. Dworkin

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Daniel P. Glavin

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Jamie E. Elsila

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Ali Abo-Riziq

University of California

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Bridgit Crews

University of California

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Aaron S. Burton

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Louis Grace

University of California

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Christopher H. House

Pennsylvania State University

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