Thioesters are compounds resulting from the bonding of sulfur with an acyl group (an alkyl group attached to a carbon-oxygen double bond), with the general formula R-S-CO-R'.
Another class of compound is also known as a thioester, these are esters in which the ester carbonyl oxygen has been replaced with a sulfur R-O-CS-R'. Such compounds can be made by the reaction of Lawesson's reagent with esters. These thiocarbonyl compounds have been used in organic synthesis, in the recent past a thioester was used in the synthesis of a sugar from a noncyclic compound. This was done by Prof Tony Barrett who is at Imperial College.
Some biochemists believe that the thioester bond was critical for the origin of life. One Nobel Prize winning scientist, Belgium's Christian de Duve, posits a "Thioester World" which preceded and developed into an "RNA World", itself the immediate precursor to the appearance of entities we would call organisms.
As de Duve explains:
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