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Who discovered DNA? – First advances of the 50s


Watson, Crick and Rosalind Franklin

In the early 1950s, American biologist James Watson and British physicist Francis Crick proposed their famous DNA double helix model. They were the first to cross the finish line in this scientific «race,» with others such as Linus Pauling (who discovered protein secondary structure) also trying to find the correct model.

Rather than carrying out new experiments in the lab, Watson and Crick mostly collected and analyzed existing pieces of data, putting them together in new and insightful ways. Some of their most crucial clues to DNA’s structure came from Rosalind Franklin, a chemist working in the lab of physicist Maurice Wilkins.

Franklin was an expert in a powerful technique for determining the structure of molecules, known as X-ray crystallography. When the crystallized form of a molecule such as DNA is exposed to X-rays, some of the rays are deflected by the atoms in the crystal, forming a diffraction pattern that gives clues about the molecule’s structure.


X-ray diffraction image of DNA. The diffraction pattern has an X shape representative of the double-stranded helical structure of DNA.


Image modified from «DNA structure and sequencing: Figure 2,» by OpenStax College, Biology (CC BY 3.0)


Franklin’s crystallography gave Watson and Crick important clues to the structure of DNA. Some of these came from the famous “image 51,” a remarkably clear and striking X-ray diffraction image of DNA produced by Franklin and her graduate student. (A modern example of the diffraction pattern produced by DNA is shown above.) To Watson, the X-shaped diffraction pattern of Franklin’s image immediately suggested a helical, two-stranded structure for DNA.


[Did Watson and Crick steal Franklin’s data?]


Watson and Crick brought together data from a number of researchers (including Franklin, Wilkins, Chargaff, and others) to assemble their celebrated model of the 3D structure of DNA. In 1962, James Watson, Francis Crick, and Maurice Wilkins were awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine. Unfortunately, by then Franklin had died, and Nobel prizes are not awarded posthumously.


Watson and Crick’s model of DNA

The structure of DNA, as represented in Watson and Crick’s model, is a double-stranded, antiparallel, right-handed helix. The sugar-phosphate backbones of the DNA strands make up the outside of the helix, while the nitrogenous bases are found on the inside and form hydrogen-bonded pairs that hold the DNA strands together.

In the model below, the orange and red atoms mark the phosphates of the sugar-phosphate backbones, while the blue atoms on the interior of the helix belong to the nitrogenous bases.

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8a Edición

Hallazgo Forense del Año ADN HIDS 2024

(14 y 15 de mayo)

La esperada presentación anual de GTH DNA “Hallazgo Forense del Año” vuelve esta temporada con más historias de investigación emocionantes de todo el mundo. Podrá verla en línea el próximo 14 de mayo de 2024, durante la Conferencia Virtual de Soluciones de Identificación Humana (HIDS). Como siempre, el programa de este año revisó varios casos interesantes para recopilar y mostrar los mejores hallazgos forenses que utilizaron bases de datos de ADN de maneras únicas y eficaces. Este programa sigue dando a conocer a escala mundial el increíble valor de las bases de datos sobre ADN para resolver y prevenir delitos, identificar a personas desaparecidas y exonerar a inocentes.

BOLIVIA

Legislación relacionada con ADN

Proyecto de Ley 8 de noviembre 2012: Descargar «Propuesta legislativa para crear la base de datos de ADN en Bolivia comenzó con el proyecto de ley llamado «Boliviano» Sistema de Identificación Criminal (SIBIC), con el objetivo de aplicar la biometría autenticación y tecnologías de la información, para el registro y determinación de la identidad de los delincuentes. Esta propuesta fue presentada en la legislatura 2015-2016 con número 0682015-16 y en la legislatura 2016-2017 con número 028/201617.

Bases de datos de ADN existentes

Servicio Nacional de Registro de huellas genéticas y dactilares administrado por el Instituto de Investigaciones Forenses.

 

LEY DEL BANCO DE PERFILES GENÉTICOS DEL ESTADO PLURINACIONAL DE BOLIVIA

 PERÚ

 

Ley 1398 de 2018 / Proyecto de Ley Nº 05630, 18 abril 2000. ADN: Ley de Base y Banco de Datos.

(Congreso de la República del Perú – Enlace)

 

Bases de datos de ADN existentes

Base de datos de desaparecidos Liderado por Policía Nacional.