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this post was submitted on 13 Dec 2024
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They're presenting the worst case scenario, but I would expect a bacteria with its chirality flipped would just die of starvation if it ever got loose in the wider ecosystem
depends on what it eats and how it eats. If it photosynthesizes, I think it could be viable; water, O2, and CO2 are non-chiral. Alternatively, if it's not an autotroph but it evolves specialized metabolic enzymes after enough generations in an industrial vat, or someone engineers those enzymes with whatever tech we have in the next few decades, that might also be a path to viability. I think there's already research on enzymatic pathways for converting D-sugars to L-sugars. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/221847354_Enzymes_for_the_biocatalytic_production_of_rare_sugars