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DNA TimeLine

  • Friedrich Miescher

    Friedrich Miescher
    Discovery of Nucleic Acid. Isolated the genetic material from white blood cell nuclei. He noted it had an acid nature and called it nuclein.
  • Phoebus Levene

    Phoebus Levene
    Discovery of DNA Components. Adenine, Guanine, Thymine, Cytosine, Deoxyribose, Phosphate.
    Defined phosphate-sugar-base units called nucleotides.
    4 nucleotides per molecule.
  • Frederick Griffith

    Frederick Griffith
    Studied the epidemiology and pathology of 2 strains of Streptococcus Pneumoniae.
    Type S → Virulent
    Type R → Non-virulent
    Reported the first widely accepted demonstrations of bacterial transformation.
  • Oswald Avery - Colin MacLeod - Maclyn McCartey

    Oswald Avery - Colin MacLeod - Maclyn McCartey
    Determinate the cause of the transformation inGriffith’s experiment.
    They took live R and heat-treated S and mixed it with one of two enzymes.
    - Proteases which destroys protein.
    - DNase which destroys DNA.
  • James Watson - Francis Crick

    James Watson - Francis Crick
    Wrote a paper in which they described DNA as a double helix with sugars and phosphates at the center and the nucleobases facing the outside.
  • Erwin Chargaff

    Erwin Chargaff
    Counting Nucleobases
  • Alfred Harshey - Martha Chase

    Alfred Harshey - Martha Chase
    DNA, not protein, was the genetic material.
    A protective protein coat was formed around the bacteriophage, but the internal DNA is what conferred its ability to produce progeny inside bacteria.
  • Linus Pauling

    Linus Pauling
    Triple Helix
  • Rosalind Franklind

    Rosalind Franklind
    Photo 51
  • James Watson - Francis Crick

    James Watson - Francis Crick
    Correct Double Helix
  • James Watson - Francis Crick - Maurice Wilkins

    James Watson - Francis Crick - Maurice Wilkins
    Receive the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
    For their discoveries concerning the molecular structure of nucleic acids and its significance for information transfer in living material.