Background
I am currently building a planet that weighs about 4 earth masses and is 2.3 earth radii long. It is an ammonia planet (as the title suggests), and has ammonia oceans with some dissolved water ice, methanol and salts. The average temperature is about 260ºK on the planet and the average pressure at sea level is about 2.5 atm.
All life on earth uses nucleic acids (either DNA or RNA) which contains the instructions on what organisms should do and develop. I would like my organisms to be able to have a set of instructions which naturally leads me to nucleic acids.
DNA would probably work quite well as nitrogen-fixing bacteria use it on Earth (thanks @Pica for telling me about this), but I would like to understand if any alternative xeno nucleic acids would also work and develop with DNA.
Requirements
This acid should meet all of these requirements:
- similar to DNA/RNA and use pretty much the same CHON elements (although I'm ok with chlorine being added in significant amounts also, which is used in a number of important reactions for many organisms).
- able to evolve and replicate like earth's DNA and RNA
- able to dissolve in ammonia
- work in cold temperatures (~260ºK) though I don't know if this is an issue
- I'm fine with stuff that only exists synthetically on earth as long as it could plausibly form on an ammonia planet like mine
The issue
I honestly don't have the time for lots of research and I'm unable to find evaluate these alternatives to regular DNA or RNA and don't even know if they would work in the conditions of this world. That's why I would like your help to find or make a suitable nucleic acid that I can use.
Thanks in advance.
Potential Options
All of these still could work, but these are options that I have in mind. I like 2′FANA the most, then PNA, but I'm still fine with GNA if it is the best option.
PNA
Peptide Nucleic Acid (PNA) is one option I've been thinking of. It replaces DNA and RNA's sugar and phosphate backbone with N-(2-Aminoethyl)glycine linked by peptide bonds. It may have been used by very early earth organisms in the reducing atmosphere we used to have, and my atmosphere is reducing also.
Peptides also dissolve in dilute ammonia, so I don't think it's a stretch to say that PNA can dissolve in the ammonia in my organisms.
GNA
Glycol Nucleic Acid (GNA) is another potential option. It is quite simple and propylene glycol, its dissolves in many different liquids including water and acetone. Because of its simplicity, I'm considering using it.
2′FANA
Fluoro-arabinose (2′FANA) forms stable bonds and is also considered a favored alternative to DNA. It replaces the hydroxide radicals in arabinonucleic acid (ANA) with fluorine as far as I can tell.
Fluoride salts are also known to dissolve pretty well in liquid ammonia, but fluorine is pretty rare in the universe. It does sound like an interesting alternative though, but I'm not sure if it can form naturally.
My biochemistry is very different from earth though, and some organisms on this world are already able to take out the halogen from halogen-alkali metal salts, so maybe some early organisms could have done that with fluorine too the fluorine for the compounds necessary?
I actually quite like the idea of this compound, and it seems to have its upsides, but I'm not sure if it can actually form naturally.