Serendipitous Discovery: Scientists Stumble Upon DNA That Defies the Blueprint of Life
**Serendipitous Discovery: Scientists Stumble Upon DNA That Defies the Blueprint of Life**
*By Dr. Raj Patel, Science Correspondent, Global1.news*
In a shocking twist of scientific fate, an international team of researchers has accidentally uncovered a form of DNA that fundamentally rewrites the rulebook of life. While probing deep-sea volcanic vents for novel enzymes, the team isolated a microbe whose genetic material uses a completely alien set of nucleobases—not the familiar A, T, C, and G—and even repurposes arsenic as a backbone stabilizer.
“We were culturing samples for an unrelated study when the sequencer kept returning gibberish,” explained lead biologist Dr. Elena Morrow from the Nereus Deep Ocean Institute. “We assumed contamination, but after months of verification, we realized we were staring at a parallel genetic alphabet.”
The newly dubbed *Xenonucleic acid* (XNA) forms a more compact, quadruple-helix structure that appears to be highly resistant to mutation and radiation. Crucially, the organism does not use the standard codon table; its machinery translates genetic instructions via a novel biochemical pathway that challenges the central dogma of molecular biology.
The discovery, published overnight in *Nature*, has sent ripples through astrobiology and synthetic biology circles. If life can arise with an alternative operating system on Earth, the implications for extraterrestrial life are profound. “We’ve always assumed DNA was universal,” Morrow added.
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