azotosome
English
Etymology
azote (“nitrogen”) + -o- + -some (“body”) From French azote (“nitrogen”) and Ancient Greek σῶμα (sôma, “body”), a "nitrogen body", formed by analogy with liposome.
Noun
azotosome (plural azotosomes)
- A theoretical nitrogen-based counterpart to liposome structures composed of acrylonitrile self-assembled membrane in a liquid methane bath
- 2015, James Stevenson, Jonathan Lunine and Paulette Clancy, "Membrane alternatives in worlds without oxygen: Creation of an azotosome", in Science Advances, published 27 Feb 2015
- This procedure is necessary because of the azotosomes’ high barriers to decomposition.
- 2015, Dirk Schulze-Makuch, Alexander Schulze-Makuch, and Joop M. Houtkooper, "The Physical, Chemical and Physiological Limits of Life" in Life vol 5, no 3, pages-1472-86, published 17 July 2015
- Furthermore, Stevenson et al. [51] recently suggested membranes composed of small organic nitrogen compounds, azotosomes that would be capable of forming and functioning in liquid methane at cryogenic temperatures.
- 2017 July 28, Mareen Y. Palmer, “ALMA detection and astrobiological potential of vinyl cyanide on Titan”, in Science Advances, volume 3, number 7:
- Confirmation of the presence of vinyl cyanide on Titan is especially interesting with respect to the possibility of cell membrane–like azotosomes.
- 2015, James Stevenson, Jonathan Lunine and Paulette Clancy, "Membrane alternatives in worlds without oxygen: Creation of an azotosome", in Science Advances, published 27 Feb 2015
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