Appreciating How the Function of DNA Was Determined
DNA was actually first observed in the 1800s by a Swiss scientist called Friedrich Miescher
Miescher is credited with being the first person to discover DNA (although he named it ‘nuclein’) and define it as a distinct molecule in 1869
However, many scientific researchers at that time doubted that this newly discovered DNA molecule could carry the genetic code
They doubted this because of the relatively simple chemical composition of DNA (because DNA was only made up of simple repeating nucleotides, which themselves were only composed of three parts: a phosphate group, deoxyribose, a nitrogen-containing organic base
For example, some scientists hypothesised that genetic information must be carried by proteins, which show much higher levels of chemical complexity
For example, proteins are which are made up of 20 different amino acids whereas DNA is made up of only 4 different nucleotides
As a result, it wasn’t until the 1940s that the role of DNA in genetic inheritance began to be more fully researched and understood
By 1953, experiments had confirmed that DNA carried the genetic code
It was understood that, despite there being only 4 nucleotides, the use of the triplet code enabled much variation (the code is universal and degenerate)
The location of DNA, protected in the nucleus, enabled the security of the genetic material rather than proteins that are found in the cytoplasm and susceptible to hydrolysis
DNA is easily copied and therefore conserved throughout generations of cells and inherited between generations within families
1953 was also the year in which Watson and Crick confirmed the double-helix structure of DNA using Rosalind Franklin’s X-ray data