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Scientists found nucleic acids. Phoebus Levene later described DNA’s parts (sugar, phosphate, bases) and named the nucleotide, but guessed the wrong structure.
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Frederick Griffith showed that something from dead harmful bacteria could change harmless bacteria. He called it “transformation.”
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Oswald Avery, Colin MacLeod, and Maclyn McCarty proved that DNA, not proteins, caused transformation in bacteria.
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Erwin Chargaff measured DNA bases and saw that adenine equals thymine, and cytosine equals guanine.
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Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase used viruses with radioactive labels. They showed DNA, not protein, carries genes.
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Watson and Crick first made a wrong model. Rosalind Franklin’s clear X-ray photo (Photo 51) revealed a double helix. Wilkins shared it, helping Watson and Crick design the correct shape.
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Nature printed three papers: Watson Crick’s model, Wilkins’ work, and Franklin Gosling’s data. Franklin’s role was vital, but she was not credited properly.