Mirror Life: Chirality in Biology and the Quest for a “Looking-Glass” Organism

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Abstract

Chirality, the handedness of molecules, is a universal feature of biochemistry, yet Earth life exhibits a striking asymmetry: proteins are built from L-amino acids, while nucleic acids incorporate D-sugars. Explaining how this homochirality emerged is a central question in origin-of-life research, with proposed mechanisms ranging from stochastic “frozen accidents” to astrophysical biases, parity violation, and chemical amplification. A complementary approach has recently gained momentum. The synthesis of “mirror” biomolecules, in which every component is built from the opposite enantiomers. Advances in peptide chemistry, nucleic acid synthesis, and enzyme engineering have yielded functional mirror polymerases, ligases, ribosomal proteins, and aptamers, demonstrating that life’s molecular logic is, in principle, invariant under reflection. These achievements not only probe the plausibility of alternative biochemical worlds but also enable practical applications, including nuclease-resistant therapeutics, biostable data storage, and orthogonal biocontained systems. At the same time, the prospect of constructing a self-replicating mirror organism raises profound biosafety and ethical challenges. This review summarizes the current theories of homochirality, highlights milestones in synthetic mirror biology, and evaluates their implications for understanding life’s origins, for the search for extraterrestrial biospheres, and for the future of biotechnology. Together, these insights suggest that life’s chemistry is contingent rather than predetermined, and that mirror life represents both a powerful experimental probe and a transformative technological frontier.

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