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reprinted with permission from Nature magazine
A Structure for Deoxyribose
Nucleic Acid J. D. Watson
and F. H. C. Crick (1)
April
25, 1953 (2), Nature
(3), 171, 737-738
We wish to suggest a structure for the salt of deoxyribose
nucleic acid (D.N.A.). This structure has novel features which are of
considerable biological interest.
A structure for nucleic acid has
already been proposed by Pauling (4) and
Corey1. They kindly made their manuscript available to us
in advance of publication. Their model consists of three intertwined
chains, with the phosphates near the fibre axis, and the bases on the
outside. In our opinion, this structure is unsatisfactory for two
reasons:
(1) We
believe that the material which gives the X-ray diagrams is the salt, not
the free acid. Without the acidic hydrogen atoms it is not clear what
forces would hold the structure together, especially as the negatively
charged phosphates near the axis will repel each other.
(2) Some of the van der Waals
distances appear to be too small.
Another three-chain structure has
also been suggested by Fraser (in the press). In his model the phosphates
are on the outside and the bases on the inside, linked together by
hydrogen bonds. This structure as described is rather ill-defined, and for
this reason we shall not comment on it.
We wish to put forward a radically different structure for the salt of deoxyribose
nucleic acid (5). This structure has
two helical chains each coiled round the same axis (see diagram). We have
made the usual chemical assumptions, namely, that each chain consists of
phosphate diester groups joining beta-D-deoxyribofuranose residues with
3',5' linkages. The two chains (but not their bases) are related by a dyad
perpendicular to the fibre axis. Both chains follow right-handed helices,
but owing to the dyad the sequences of the atoms in the two chains run in opposite directions (6)
. Each chain loosely resembles Furberg's2 model No. 1 (7); that is, the
bases are on the inside of the helix and the phosphates on the outside.
The configuration of the sugar and the atoms near it is close to Furberg's
"standard configuration," the sugar being roughly perpendicular to the
attached base. There is a residue on each every 3.4 A. in the
z-direction. We have assumed an angle of 36° between adjacent
residues in the same chain, so that the structure repeats after 10
residues on each chain, that is, after 34 A. The distance of a phosphorus
atom from the fibre axis is 10 A. As the phosphates are on the outside,
cations have easy access to them.
 |
Figure
1 This figure is purely diagrammatic
(8).
The two ribbons symbolize the two phophate-sugar chains, and the
horizonal rods the pairs of bases holding the chains together. The
vertical line marks the fibre
axis. |
The structure is an open
one, and its water content is rather high. At lower water contents we
would expect the bases to tilt so that the structure could become more
compact.
The novel feature of the structure is the manner in which
the two chains are held together by the purine and pyrimidine bases. The
planes of the bases are perpendicular to the fibre axis. They are joined
together in pairs, a single base from one chain being hydroden-bonded to a
single base from the other chain, so that the two lie side by side with
identical z-coordinates. One of the pair must be a purine and the
other a pyrimidine for bonding to occur. The hydrogen bonds are made as
follows: purine position 1 to pyrimidine position 1; purine position 6 to
pyrimidine position 6.
If it is assumed that the
bases only occur in the structure in the most plausible tautomeric forms
(that is, with the keto rather than the enol configurations) it is found
that only specific pairs of bases can bond together. These pairs are: adenine (purine) with thymine (pyrimidine),
and guanine (purine) with cytosine (pyrimidine) (9).
In other words, if an
adenine forms one member of a pair, on either chain, then on these
assumptions the other member must be thymine; similarly for guanine and
cytosine. The sequence of bases on a single chain does not appear to be
restricted in any way. However, if only specific pairs of bases can be
formed, it follows that if the sequence of bases on one chain is given,
then the sequence on the other chain is automatically
determined.
It has been found experimentally
(10)3,4 that the ratio of the amounts of
adenine to thymine, and the ratio of guanine to cytosine, are always very
close to unity for deoxyribose nucleic acid.
It is probably
impossible to build this structure with a ribose sugar in place of the
deoxyribose, as the extra oxygen atom would make too close a van der Waals
contact.
The previously published X-ray data5,6 on
deoxyribose nucleic acid are insufficient for a rigorous test of our
structure. So far as we can tell, it is roughly compatible with the
experimental data, but it must be regarded as unproved until it has been
checked against more exact results. Some of these
are given in the following communications (11). We were
not aware of the details of the results presented
there when we devised our structure (12), which rests mainly
though not entirely on published experimental data and stereochemical
arguments.
It has not escaped our notice (13) that the specific pairing we have
postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the
genetic material.
Full details of the structure, including the
conditions assumed in building it, together with a set of coordinates for
the atoms, will be published elsewhere
(14).
We are much indebted to Dr. Jerry
Donohue for constant advice and criticism, especially on interatomic
distances. We have also been stimulated by a
knowledge of the general nature of the unpublished experimental results
and ideas of Dr. M. H. F. Wilkins, Dr. R. E. Franklin and their co-workers
at King’s College, London
(15). One of us (J. D. W.) has been aided by a fellowship from
the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.
1 Pauling, L.,
and Corey, R. B., Nature, 171, 346 (1953); Proc. U.S. Nat.
Acad. Sci., 39, 84 (1953). 2 Furberg, S.,
Acta Chem. Scand., 6, 634 (1952). 3 Chargaff, E.,
for references see Zamenhof, S., Brawerman, G., and Chargaff, E.,
Biochim. et Biophys. Acta, 9, 402 (1952). 4 Wyatt, G.
R., J. Gen. Physiol., 36, 201 (1952). 5 Astbury, W. T.,
Symp. Soc. Exp. Biol. 1, Nucleic Acid, 66 (Camb. Univ. Press,
1947). 6 Wilkins, M. H. F., and Randall, J. T., Biochim.
et Biophys. Acta, 10, 192 (1953).
Annotations (1)
It’s no surprise that James D. Watson and Francis H. C. Crick spoke of
finding the structure of DNA within minutes of their first meeting at the
Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, England, in 1951. Watson, a 23-year-old
geneticist, and Crick, a 35-year-old former physicist studying protein
structure for his doctorate in biophysics, both saw DNA’s architecture as
the biggest question in biology. Knowing the structure of this molecule
would be the key to understanding how genetic information is copied. In
turn, this would lead to finding cures for human diseases.
Aware of
these profound implications, Watson and Crick were obsessed with the
problem—and, perhaps more than any other scientists, they were determined
to find the answer first. Their competitive spirit drove them to work
quickly, and it undoubtedly helped them succeed in their
quest.
Watson and Crick’s rapport led them to speedy insights as
well. They incessantly discussed the problem, bouncing ideas off one
another. This was especially helpful because each one was inspired by
different evidence. When the visually sensitive Watson, for example, saw a
cross-shaped pattern of spots in an X-ray photograph of DNA, he knew DNA
had to be a double helix. From data on the symmetry of DNA crystals,
Crick, an expert in crystal structure, saw that DNA’s two chains run in
opposite directions.
Since the groundbreaking double helix
discovery in 1953, Watson has used the same fast, competitive approach to
propel a revolution in molecular biology. As a professor at Harvard in the
1950s and 1960s, and as past director and current president of Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory, he tirelessly built intellectual arenas—groups of
scientists and laboratories—to apply the knowledge gained from the double
helix discovery to protein synthesis, the genetic code, and other fields
of biological research. By relentlessly pushing these fields forward, he
also advanced the view among biologists that solving major health problems
requires research at the most fundamental level of life.
(2) On this date,
Nature published the paper you are reading.
According to
science historian Victor McElheny of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, the publication of this paper helped change how scientists
approached biology. Increasingly in the 1950s, biologists were working out
the fundamental mechanisms of life—an undertaking that involved figuring
out how genetic information is stored and transmitted. The discovery of
the double-helix structure of DNA gave momentum to this kind of
work.
Historians wonder how the timing of the DNA race affected its
outcome. After years of being diverted by the war effort, scientists were
able to focus more on problems such as those affecting human health. Yet,
in the United States, many research fields were threatened by a curb on
the free exchange of ideas. During the McCarthy era in the early 1950s,
the U.S. State Department denied American researcher Linus Pauling a
passport to travel internationally. Some think Pauling might have beaten
Watson and Crick to the punch if Pauling’s ability to travel had not been
hampered.
(3) Nature (founded in 1869)——and hundreds of other scientific journals—help
push science forward by providing a venue for researchers to publish and
debate findings. Today, journals also validate the quality of this
research through a rigorous evaluation called peer review. Generally at
least two scientists, selected by the journal’s editors, judge the quality
and originality of each paper, recommending whether or not it should be
published.
Science publishing was a different game when Watson and
Crick submitted this paper to Nature. With no formal review
process at most journals, editors usually reached their own decisions on
submissions, seeking advice informally only when they were unfamiliar with
a subject.
(4) The effort
to discover the structure of DNA was a race among several players:
world-renowned chemist Linus Pauling at the California Institute of
Technology, X-ray crystallographers Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin
at King’s College London, and Watson and Crick at the Cavendish
Laboratory, Cambridge University.
The competitive
juices were flowing well before the DNA sprint was in high gear. In 1951,
Pauling narrowly beat scientists at the Cavendish Lab, a top center for
probing protein structure, to the discovery that proteins are arranged in
structures called alpha-helices. The defeat stung. When Pauling sent a
paper to be published in early 1953 that proposed a three-stranded DNA
structure, Sir Lawrence Bragg—the head of Cavendish—gave Watson and Crick
permission to work full-time on DNA’s structure. Cavendish was not about
to lose to Pauling twice.
Pauling's proposed
three-stranded helix had the bases facing out. While the model was wrong,
Watson and Crick were sure Pauling would soon learn his error. They
estimated that he was six weeks away from the right answer. Electrified by
the urgency—and by the prospect of beating a science superstar—Watson and
Crick spent four weeks obsessing about DNA in endless conversations and
bouts of model-building to arrive at the correct structure.
In 1952, Wilkins and
the head of the King’s laboratory denied Pauling's request to view their
X-ray photos of DNA—crucial evidence that inspired Watson's vision of the
double helix. Pauling had to settle for inferior older photographs. In the
same year, he was planning to attend a science meeting in London, where he
most likely would have renewed his request in person. But it was the
McCarthy era, and the U.S. State Department denied Pauling's request for a
passport because of his "un-American" antiwar activism. It was fitting,
then, that Pauling, who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1954, also won
the Nobel Peace Prize in 1962, the same year Watson, Crick, and Maurice
Wilkins won their Nobel Prize for discovering the double helix.
(5) Here, the
young scientists Watson and Crick call their model “radically different”
to strongly set it apart from the model proposed by science powerhouse
Linus Pauling. This claim was justified. While Pauling’s model was a
triple helix with the bases sticking out, the Watson-Crick model was a
double helix with the bases pointing in and forming pairs of adenine (A)
with thymine (T), and cytosine (C) with guanine (G).
(6) This
central description of the double-helix model still stands today—a
monumental feat considering that the vast majority of research findings
are changed over time.
According to science
historian Victor McElheny of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
the staying power of the double-helix theory puts it in a class with
Newton’s laws of motion. Just as Newtonian physics survived centuries of
scientific scrutiny to become the foundation for today’s space programs,
the double-helix model has provided the bedrock for several research
fields since 1953, including the biochemistry of DNA replication, the
cracking of the genetic code, genetic engineering, and the sequencing of
the human genome.
(7) Norwegian
scientist Sven Furberg’s DNA model—which correctly put the bases on the
inside of a helix—was one of many ideas about DNA that helped Watson and
Crick to infer the molecule’s structure. To some extent, they were
synthesizers of these ideas. Doing little laboratory work, they gathered
clues and advice from other experts to find the answer. Watson and Crick’s
extraordinary scientific preparation, passion, and collaboration made them
uniquely capable of this synthesis.
(8) A visual
representation of Watson and Crick’s model was crucial to show how the
components of DNA fit together in a double helix. In 1953, Crick’s wife,
Odile, drew the diagram used to represent DNA in this paper. Scientists use many different
kinds of visual representations of DNA.
(9) The last
hurdle for Watson and Crick was to figure out how to arrange DNA’s four
bases (adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine) inside the double helix
without distorting the molecule. To visualize the answer, Watson built
cardboard cutouts of the bases. Early one morning, as Watson moved the
cutouts around on a tabletop, he found that the overall shape of an
adenine molecule paired with a thymine molecule was similar to the overall
shape of a guanine-cytosine pair. He immediately realized that arranging
the bases in these pairs made a DNA structure without bulges or strains.
Watson solved the puzzle "not by logic but serendipity," Crick recalled in
his book What Mad Pursuit.
Watson and Crick
picked up this model-building approach from eminent chemist Linus Pauling,
who had successfully used it to discover that some proteins have a helical
structure.
(10) This
sentence refers to the work of Erwin Chargaff, a biochemist at Columbia
University. In the late 1940s, Chargaff analyzed the proportions of the
four different types of base molecules in DNA, and found that DNA always
contains equal amounts of guanine and cytosine, and equal amounts of
adenine and thymine.
The significance of
this discovery remained unclear until February 1953. That’s when Watson
figured out how DNA’s four bases paired with one another. By fiddling with
cardboard cutout versions of the base molecules, he discovered that
adenine always pairs with thymine, and guanine always pairs with cytosine.
Now Chargaff’s finding made perfect sense to Watson and Crick: If every
adenine and thymine are paired in DNA, there must be an equal number of
these two molecules. The same goes for guanine and cytosine.
(11) Alongside
the Watson-Crick paper in the April 25, 1953, issue of Nature
were separately published papers by scientists Maurice Wilkins and
Rosalind Franklin of King’s College, who worked independently of each
other. The Wilkins and Franklin papers described the X-ray crystallography
evidence that helped Watson and Crick devise their structure. The authors
of the three papers, their lab chiefs, and the editors of Nature
agreed that all three would be published in the same issue.
The “following
communications” that our authors are referring to are the papers by
Franklin and Wilkins, published on the journal pages immediately after
Watson and Crick’s paper. They (and other papers) can be downloaded as PDF
files (Adobe Acrobat required) from Nature’s 50 Years of DNA Web site.
Here are the direct
links:
Molecular Configuration in Sodium
Thymonucleate Franklin, R., and Gosling, R.
G. Nature 171, 740-741 (1953) http://www.nature.com/nature /dna50/franklingosling.pdf
Molecular
Structure of Deoxypentose Nucleic Acids Wilkins, M. H. F.,
Stokes, A. R., & Wilson, H. R. Nature 171, 738-740
(1953) http://www.nature.com/nature/ dna50/wilkins.pdf
(12) Here,
Watson and Crick say that they "were not aware of the details" of the work
of King’s College scientist Rosalind Franklin—a statement that marks what
many consider an inexcusable failure to give Franklin proper
credit.
According to Lynne Elkin, a science historian at California
State University, Hayward, it’s true that Watson and Crick were not aware
of all the details of Franklin’s work, but they were aware of enough of
the details to discover the structure of DNA. Yet this paper does not ever
formally acknowledge her, instead concealing her significant role by
saying they "were not aware" of her work.
What exactly was
Franklin’s research, and how did Watson and Crick gain access to it? While
they were busy building their models, Franklin was at work on the DNA
puzzle using X-ray crystallography, which involved taking X-ray
photographs of DNA samples to infer their structure. By late February
1953, her analysis of these photos brought her close to the correct DNA
model.
But Franklin stopped her work on DNA because she was
frustrated with a strained environment at King’s, one that pitted her
against her colleagues. In an institutional culture that barred women from
the dining room and other social venues, she was denied access to the
informal discourse that is essential to any scientist’s work. Seeing no
chance for a tolerable professional life at King’s, Franklin decided to
take another job. As she was preparing to leave, she turned her X-ray
photographs over to her colleague Maurice Wilkins.
Then, in perhaps
the most pivotal moment in the search for DNA’s structure, Wilkins, a
longtime friend of Crick, showed Watson one of Franklin’s photographs
without Franklin’s permission. Watson recalled, "The instant I saw the
picture my mouth fell open and my pulse began to race." To Watson, the
cross-shaped pattern of spots in the photo meant that DNA had to have a
helical structure. Franklin’s photograph was critical in solving the
problem, as Watson admitted in his 1968 book, The Double
Helix.
Watson and Crick also had access to an internal report
from the Medical Research Council, a British agency for funding life
sciences, summarizing much of Franklin’s unpublished work on DNA,
including precise measurements of the molecule. As the Cavendish
representative to the agency, scientist Max Perutz had a copy of the
report, and when Crick asked to see it, Perutz obliged. While the report
was not confidential, science historian Lynne Elkin contends that "showing
unpublished work to an unacknowledged competitor was a questionable act
which justifiably infuriated" John Randall, the head of King’s.
Crick later said the data in the report enabled him to reach the
significant conclusion that DNA has two chains running in opposite
directions. Although Franklin was listed in the acknowledgements section
with other scientists, there was no specific mention of her contributions.
Was it unethical for Wilkins to reveal the photographs, or for
Perutz to hand over the King’s report? How should Watson and Crick have
recognized Franklin for her contribution to their paper? For decades,
scientists and historians have wrestled over these issues.
To read
more about Rosalind Franklin and her history with Wilkins, Watson, and
Crick, see the following Web sites:
“Light on a Dark Lady” by Anne
Piper, a lifelong friend of Franklin’s http://www.physics.ucla.edu/ ~cwp/articles/franklin/piper.html
“The
Double Helix and the Wronged Heroine,” an essay on Nature’s
“Double Helix: 50 years of DNA” Web site http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/ DynaPage.taf?file=/nature/journal/ v421/n6921/full/nature01399_fs.html
A
review of Brenda Maddox’s recent book, Rosalind Franklin: The Dark
Lady of DNA, in The Guardian (UK) http://books.guardian.co.uk/ whitbread2002/story/ 0,12605,842764,00.html
(13) This
phrase and the sentence it begins may be one of the biggest
understatements in biology. Watson and Crick realized at the time that
their work had important scientific implications beyond a “pretty
structure.” In this statement, the authors are saying that the base
pairing in DNA (adenine links to thymine and guanine to cytosine) provides
the mechanism by which genetic information carried in the double helix can
be precisely copied. Knowledge of this copying mechanism started a
scientific revolution that would lead to, among other advances in
molecular biology, the ability to manipulate DNA for genetic engineering
and medical research, and to decode the human genome, along with those of
the mouse, yeast, fruit fly, and other research organisms.
(14) This paper is short because it was intended only to
announce Watson and Crick’s discovery, and because they were in a
competitive situation. In January 1954, they published the "full details"
of their work in Proceedings of the Royal Society. This "expound
later" approach was common in science in the 1950s. In fact, Rosalind
Franklin did the same thing, supplementing her short April 25 paper with
two longer articles.
Journals today offer scientists a greater
variety of publishing formats than journals in the 1950s. Nature
now has more than five different options, most of which are subjected to a
rigorous evaluation known as peer review. Since Watson and Crick largely
presented a hypothesis instead of new data in this paper, Nature
would likely have published it today as an "Analysis" paper—one of the
journal’s shorter peer-reviewed formats. This paper was not
peer-reviewed—Nature had no formal review process in the
1950s—but it would have been peer-reviewed if submitted today.
For
many decades, conferences have also been an important forum for
researchers to present their work. Watson reported his and Crick’s results
at the prestigious annual symposium at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in
June 1953. Meetings continue to be a significant part of the culture of
science at Cold Spring Harbor.
(15) Science
historian Lynne Elkin calls this sentence an understatement. She argues
that Watson and Crick were "more than stimulated" by Franklin’s work—and
had "more than a general knowledge" of it—because they relied on her X-ray
photograph and her specific DNA measurements.
Interestingly, this
sentence contained a stronger acknowledgment of Franklin’s work in an early draft of the paper: "We have also been stimulated
by the very beautiful experimental work of Dr. M. H. Wilkins and his
co-workers at Kings College, London." Elkin suggests that the phrase "very
beautiful" is most likely a nod to Franklin’s X-ray photograph. The same
draft also acknowledged Franklin’s work with the sentence: "It is known
that there is much unpublished experimental material." When Maurice
Wilkins read the draft, he advised Watson and Crick to delete this
sentence and the phrase "very beautiful." They agreed to his
suggestion.
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