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The Discovery of the
Molecular Structure of DNA - The Double Helix
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A Scientific
Breakthrough
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The sentence "This structure has novel features
which are of considerable biological interest" may be
one of science's most famous understatements. It
appeared in April 1953 in the scientific paper where
James Watson and Francis Crick presented the
structure of the DNA-helix, the molecule that carries
genetic information from one generation to the
other.
Nine years later, in 1962, they shared the Nobel
Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Maurice Wilkins,
for solving one of the most important of all
biological riddles. Half a century later, important
new implications of this contribution to science are
still coming to light.
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What is DNA?
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| Francis Crick and James
Watson, 1953. Photo: Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives |
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| Maurice Wilkins. |
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The work of many scientists
paved the way for the exploration of DNA. Way back in
1868, almost a century before the Nobel Prize was
awarded to Watson, Crick and Wilkins, a young Swiss
physician named Friedrich Miescher, isolated
something no one had ever seen before from the nuclei
of cells. He called the compound "nuclein." This is
today called nucleic acid, the "NA" in DNA
(deoxyribo-nucleic-acid) and RNA
(ribo-nucleic-acid).
Two years earlier, the Czech
monk Gregor Mendel, had finished a series of
experiments with peas. His observations turned out to
be closely connected to the finding of nuclein.
Mendel was able to show that certain traits in the
peas, such as their shape or color, were inherited in
different packages. These packages are what we now
call genes.
For a long time the connection
between nucleic acid and genes was not known. But in
1944 the American scientist Oswald Avery managed to
transfer the ability to cause disease from one strain
of bacteria to another. But not only that: the
previously harmless bacteria could also pass the
trait along to the next generation. What Avery had
moved was nucleic acid. This proved that genes were
made up of nucleic acid.
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Solving the
Puzzle
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| The original DNA model by
Watson and Crick. Photo: Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives |
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In the late 1940's, the members of the scientific
community were aware that DNA was most likely the
molecule of life, even though many were skeptical
since it was so "simple." They also knew that DNA
included different amounts of the four bases adenine,
thymine, guanine and cytosine (usually abbreviated A,
T, G and C), but nobody had the slightest idea of
what the molecule might look like.
In order to solve the elusive structure of DNA, a
couple of distinct pieces of information needed to be
put together. One was that the phosphate backbone was
on the outside with bases on the inside; another that
the molecule was a double helix. It was also
important to figure out that the two strands run in
opposite directions and that the molecule had a
specific base pairing.
As in the solving of other complex problems, the
work of many people was needed to establish the full
picture.
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Using X-rays to See Through
DNA
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"Photograph 51". X-ray
diffraction photo of a DNA molecule, structure B,
Photo: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Archives |
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Watson and Crick used stick-and-ball models to
test their ideas on the possible structure of DNA.
Other scientists used experimental methods instead.
Among them were Rosalind Franklin and Maurice
Wilkins, who were using X-ray diffraction to
understand the physical structure of the DNA
molecule.
When you shine X-rays on any kind of crystal
– and some biological molecules, such as DNA,
can form crystals if treated in certain ways –
the invisible rays bounce off the sample. The rays
then create complex patterns on photographic film. By
looking at the patterns, it is possible to figure out
important clues about the structures that make up the
crystal.
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A Three-Helical
Structure?
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| Model of the alpha helix,
1951. Photo: Oregon State
University's Special Collections |
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The scientist Linus Pauling was eager to solve the
mystery of the shape of DNA. In 1954 he became a
Nobel Laureate in Chemistry for his ground-breaking
work on chemical bonds and the structure of molecules
and crystals. In early 1953 he had published a paper
where he proposed a triple-helical structure for DNA.
Watson and Crick had also previously worked out a
three-helical model, in 1951. But their theory was
wrong.
Their mistake was partly based on Watson having
misremembered a talk by Rosalind Franklin where she
reported that she had established the water content
of DNA by using X-ray crystallographic methods. But
Watson did not take notes, and remembered the numbers
incorrectly.
Instead, it was Franklin's famous "photograph 51"
that finally revealed the helical structure of DNA to
Watson and Crick in 1953. This picture of DNA that
had been crystallized under moist conditions shows a
fuzzy X in the middle of the molecule, a pattern
indicating a helical structure.
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Specific
Base-Pairing
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The base-pairing mystery had
been partly solved by the biochemist Erwin Chargoff
some years earlier. In 1949 he showed that even
though different organisms have different amounts of
DNA, the amount of adenine always equals the amount
of thymine. The same goes for the pair guanine and
cytosine. For example, human DNA contains about 30
percent each of adenine and thymine, and 20 percent
each of guanine and cytosine.
With this information at hand
Watson was able to figure out the pairing rules. On
the 21st of February 1953 he had the key insight,
when he saw that the adenine-thymine bond was exactly
as long as the cytosine-guanine bond. If the bases
were paired in this way, each rung of the twisted
ladder in the helix would be of equal length, and the
sugar-phosphate backbone would be smooth.
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Structure Shows
Action
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"It has not escaped our notice
that the specific pairing we have postulated
immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for
the genetic material" wrote Watson and Crick in the
scientific paper that was published in Nature, April
25, 1953.
This was indeed a breakthrough
in the study of how genetic material passes from
generation to generation. Once the model was
established, its mere structure hinted that DNA was
indeed the carrier of the genetic code and thus the
key molecule of heredity, developmental biology and
evolution.
The specific base pairing
underlies the perfect copying of the molecule, which
is essential for heredity. During cell division, the
DNA molecule is able to "unzip" into two pieces. One
new molecule is formed from each half-ladder, and due
to the specific pairing this gives rise to two
identical daughter copies from each parent
molecule.
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We All Share the Same
Building Blocks
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DNA is a winning formula for
packaging genetic material. Therefore almost all
organisms – bacteria, plants, yeast and animals
– carry genetic information encapsulated as
DNA. One exception is some viruses that use RNA
instead.
Different species need
different amounts of DNA. Therefore the copying of
the DNA that precedes cell division differs between
organisms. For example, the DNA in E. coli bacteria
is made up of 4 million base pairs and the whole
genome is thus one millimeter long. The single-cell
bacterium can copy its genome and divide into two
cells once every 20 minutes.
The DNA of humans, on the other
hand, is composed of approximately 3 billion base
pairs, making up a total of almost a meter-long
stretch of DNA in every cell in our bodies.
In order to fit, the DNA must
be packaged in a very compact form. In E. coli the
single circular DNA molecule is curled up in a
condensed fashion, whereas the human DNA is packaged
in 23 distinct chromosome pairs. Here the genetic
material is tightly rolled up on structures called
histones.
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A New Biological
Era
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This knowledge of how genetic material is stored
and copied has given rise to a new way of looking at
and manipulating biological processes, called
molecular biology. With the help of so-called
restriction enzymes, molecules that cut the DNA at
particular stretches, pieces of DNA can be cut out or
inserted at different places.
In basic science, where you want to understand the
role of all the different genes in humans and
animals, new techniques have been developed. For one
thing, it is now possible to make mice that are
genetically modified and lack particular genes. By
studying these animals scientists try to figure out
what that gene may be used for in normal mice. This
is called the knockout technique, since stretches of
DNA have been taken away, or knocked out.
Scientists have also been able to insert new bits
of DNA into cells that lack particular pieces of
genes or whole genes. With this new DNA, the cell
becomes capable of producing gene products it could
not make before. The hope is that, in the future,
diseases that arise due to the lack of a particular
protein could be treated by this kind of gene
therapy.
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Was Franklin
Nominated?
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Rosalind Franklin.
Photo: Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory Archives
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Many voices have argued that the Nobel Prize
should also have been awarded to Rosalind Franklin,
since her experimental data provided a very important
piece of evidence leading to the solving of the DNA
structure. In a recent interview in the magazine
Scientific American, Watson himself suggested that it
might have been a good idea to give Wilkins and
Franklin the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, and him and
Crick the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
– in that way all four would have been
honored.
Rosalind Franklin died in 1958. As a rule only
living persons can be nominated for the the Nobel
Prize, so the 1962 Prize was out of the question. But
she may have been a nominee while she was still
alive. The Nobel archives, that among other things
contain the nominations connected to the prizes, are
held closed. But 50 years after a particular prize
had been awarded, the archives concerning the
nominees are released. Therefore, in 2008 it will be
possible to see whether Rosalind Franklin was ever a
nominee for the Nobel Prize concerning the DNA
helix.
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The DNA-Helix
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| The sugar-phosphate
backbone is on the outside and the four different
bases are on the inside of the DNA molecule. |
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The two strands of the double helix are
anti-parallel, which means that they run in opposite
directions.
The sugar-phosphate backbone is on the outside of
the helix, and the bases are on the inside. The
backbone can be thought of as the sides of a ladder,
whereas the bases in the middle form the rungs of the
ladder.
Each rung is composed of two base pairs. Either an
adenine-thymine pair that form a two-hydrogen bond
together, or a cytosine-guanine pair that form a
three-hydrogen bond. The base pairing is thus
restricted.
This restriction is essential when the DNA is
being copied: the DNA-helix is first "unzipped" in
two long stretches of sugar-phosphate backbone with a
line of free bases sticking up from it, like the
teeth of a comb. Each half will then be the template
for a new, complementary strand. Biological machines
inside the cell put the corresponding free bases onto
the split molecule and also "proof-read" the result
to find and correct any mistakes. After the doubling,
this gives rise to two exact copies of the original
DNA molecule.
The coding regions in the DNA strand, the genes,
make up only a fraction of the total amount of DNA.
The stretches that flank the coding regions are
called introns, and consist of non-coding DNA.
Introns were looked upon as junk in the early days.
Today, biologists and geneticists believe that this
non-coding DNA may be essential in order to expose
the coding regions and to regulate how the genes are
expressed.
By Lotta Fredholm, Science
Journalist
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READ MORE |
PLAY A GAME |
MORE ABOUT THE GENETIC CODE |
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| MORE ABOUT DNA-RNA-PROTEIN |
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