Ouabache said:
Intriguing thought, but you're right there are some gaping holes. hole #1, There is no Ca in DNA.
Perhaps I can fill this hole--since it is known that some cations are associated with DNA--so if not Ca, perhaps Mg, which has three stable isotopes, see here:
Abstract
Annual Review of Biophysics and Biomolecular Structure
Vol. 32: 27-45 (Volume publication date June 2003)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.biophys.32.110601.141726)
First published online as a Review in Advance on February 14, 2003
CATIONS AS HYDROGEN BOND DONORS: A View of Electrostatic Interactions in DNA
Juan A. Subirana1 and *Montserrat Soler-López2*
department d'Enginyeria Química, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain; 08028 email:
juan.a.subirana@upc.es
2European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Grenoble Outstation, Grenoble Cedex 9, France; 38042 email:
soler@embl-grenoble.fr
Cations are bound to nucleic acids in a solvated state. High-resolution X-ray diffraction studies of oligonucleotides provide a detailed view of Mg2+, and occasionally other ions bound to DNA. In a survey of several such structures, certain general observations emerge. First, cations bind preferentially to the guanine base in the major groove or to phosphate group oxygen atoms. Second, cations interact with DNA most frequently via water molecules in their primary solvation shell, direct ion-DNA contacts being only rarely observed. Thus, the solvated ions should be viewed as hydrogen bond donors in addition to point charges. Finally, ion interaction sites are readily exchangeable: The same site may be occupied by any ion, including spermine, as well as by a water molecule.
Ouabache said:
hole #2, during replication, a new strand of DNA is made using chemical constituents presently available (whether recycled from within the body, coming from food or the air that is breathed). So if there were some rare isotopes initially present, they are soon diluted out and homogeneous with the background, after N generations.
OK, a hole not so easy to fill--but consider possibility that the rare isotope from meteor was radioactive, with very long half-life, with constant decay over time to one of the stable cations discussed above that is associated with DNA. In that way, over many millions of N generations the isotope would be present in the replicated DNA sequence.