| “These
pairs are: adenine (purine) with thymine (pyrimidine), and guanine (purine)
with cytosine (pyrimidine).”
The
last hurdle for Watson and Crick was to figure out how DNA’s four
bases paired without distorting the helix. To visualize the answer, Watson
built cardboard cutouts of the bases. Early one morning, as Watson moved
the cutouts around on a tabletop, he found that only one combination of
base molecules made a DNA structure without bulges or strains. As Crick
put it in his book What Mad Pursuit, Watson solved the puzzle
“not by logic but serendipity.” Watson and Crick picked up
this model-building approach from eminent chemist Linus
Pauling, who had successfully used it to discover that some proteins
have a helical structure.
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exploratorium |