image credit: Pray, Nature Education, 2008
The Method of DNA Replication
(discussed Oct 12)
Three models of DNA replication were popular when Watson and Crick discovered the structure of DNA in 1953: conservative, semi-conservative, and dispersive. The conservative model proposed an entirely new DNA double helix was synthesized during each round of replication, resulting in one "new" helix and one "old" helix. According to semi-conservative model, each round of replication results in hybrid helices with one new strand and one old strand. The dispersive model also suggested hybrid DNA molecules, but the pieces were randomly dispersed throughout the helices. It took until 1958 for Meselson and Stahl to identify the semi-conservative model as the correct model. They measured the density of DNA molecules after subsequent replications when E. coli was transferred from N15 containing media to N14 media. This elegantly simple experiment laid the foundation for the discovery of many of the enzymatic processes involving DNA.
image credit: Pray, Nature Education, 2008
image credit: Pray, Nature Education, 2008
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