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How is the overall shape of the DNA molecule described in Watson and Crick's model?

How is the overall shape of the DNA molecule described in Watson and Crick's model-example-1
User CoXier
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The shape of the DNA model was described by James Watson and Francis Crick using an X-ray diffraction image obtained by Rosalind Franklin, known as photo 51, and shared with them by Maurice Wilkins without permission.

This picture determined that the DNA was a double helix with antiparallel strands and that the backbone of the DNA was in the outside of the molecule.

This information, along with previous discoverings, such as:

• DNA is made of nucleotides made of sugar, phosphate, and bases (Levene, 1919)

,

• DNA has an equal number of purines (A+G) and pyrimidines (C+T), (Chargadd, 1950)

allowed Watson & Crick to make their model, in which they describe the structure of the DNA as a double helix with antiparallel strands, paired via complementary base pairs, with the bases in the inside of the helix.

How is the overall shape of the DNA molecule described in Watson and Crick's model-example-1
User Michael Burger
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