Nah it doesn't. The article is a typical hunk of junk, I literally only got two words in before facepalming. I cannot stand the hyperbole that journalists put into headlines about science; it isn't even hyperbole, it's just plain lying, in this case and many others.
They have found a jumble of various nucleobases. These are the basic types of single molecules that are used to form genetic material like RNA and DNA. But in no sense have they found DNA, which is much more refined and complex and would be a truly bizarre and revolutionary discovery.
There isn't really anything that can be deduced from this, either. It just highlights previous (and genuinely fascinating) discoveries, which have shown that the molecules for life can in fact arise spontaneously and with relative ease, and would indeed have done so in what is thought to be Earth's early atmosphere:
Miller
These include amino acids, which are really the central molecules of life and are 'what DNA bosses around', and indeed nucleobases such as those found on this meteor; adenine, for example, can form when hydrogen cyanide and ammonia, two extremely basic compounds, react in water. So hopefully you see the point; contrary to what is implied by the article, all this shows is that the molecules that life on Earth is based on form spontaneously, and by no means does this just happen on meteoroids; they are not some kind of mysterious and holy entity spreading life through the universe. Indeed most of the original molecules were probably born and raised here on Earth, by the obvious virtue it has of being much much bigger.
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