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6.1 DNA and the Code of Life Pages 228-233
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nuclein A name given to DNA when it was discovered by Friedrich Miescher in 1869.
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Joachim Hammerling performed experiments on Acetabularia to verify that the genetic material was in the nucleus. image: taringa.netimage: biologysemester58.wikispaces.com
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Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase 1952- showed that viruses needed only to inject their DNA into a bacteria to produce more viruses. Image: osulibrary.orst.edu
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Phoebus Levene 1920’s DNA was composed of: A pentose sugar (cyclic, 5-carbon sugar) A nitogenous base A phospate group, PO 4 3-
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5 Carbon sugar Deoxyribose has one less oxygen atom than ribose. Image: mun.ca
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Phosphate group PO 4 3- image: m2c3.com
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Nitrogenous Bases Adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine Image: faculty.ccbcmd.edu
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Erwin Chargaff 1940 The amount of Adenine, A, is equal to the amount of Thymine, T. The amount of Guanine, G, is equal to the amount of Cytosine, C.
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Nucleotide DNA has a negative charge because of the phosphate ions in its backbone. image: dnareplication.info
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Rosalin Franklin 1951 X-ray crystallography: x-rays were aimed at a crystal of DNA to produce a diffraction pattern. Image: cwp.library.ucla.eduimage: shellemsbioblog.blogspot.com
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James Watson and Francis Crick 1953 DNA model Image: chemheritage.org
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Complimentary base pairing Image: dedunn.edublogs.org
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