The discovery of all five nucleobases on Ryugu strengthens the idea that life’s molecular ingredients formed in space before reaching Earth.
A new study reports that samples from the asteroid Ryugu contain all five fundamental nucleobases, the molecular “letters” of life.
Tiny asteroid grains can preserve chemical clues about the ingredients that may have helped life emerge on Earth. The Ryugu material was returned from space in 2020 by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s (JAXA) Hayabusa2 mission.
In 2023, an international research team reported finding uracil, one of the nucleobases, in the Ryugu samples. Now, a study published on March 16, 2026, in Nature Astronomy by Japanese scientists has confirmed that all five nucleobases are present in the pristine asteroid material.
The finding suggests that these life related ingredients may have been common across the young Solar System…



Yeah, I’m not buying this. All this is saying is that the building blocks of life are surprisingly easy to form, a lot easier than most people realize. The hard part comes afterwards, which is the reason it took like a billion years for single celled life to develop once the earth cooled down enough and another billion to perfect the replication chemistry.
It’s the same conclusion to draw when we found amino acids on asteroids a while back.