Meselson and stahl biography



Meselson and stahl summary...

Meselson and stahl biography

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  • Meselson and stahl summary
  • Meselson and stahl experiment notes
  • Meselson and stahl experiment explained
  • Meselson–Stahl experiment

    experiment in DNA replicatication

    The Meselson–Stahl experiment is an experiment by Matthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl in which supported Watson and Crick's hypothesis that DNA replication was semiconservative.

    In semiconservative replication, when the double-stranded DNA helix is replicated, each of the two new double-stranded DNA helices consisted of one strand from the original helix and one newly synthesized. It has been called "the most beautiful experiment in biology".[1] Meselson and Stahl decided the best way to trace the parent DNA would be to tag them by changing one of its atoms.

    Since nitrogen is present in all of the DNA bases, they generated parent DNA containing a heavier isotope of nitrogen than would be present naturally. This altered mass allowed them to determine how much of the parent DNA was present in the DNA after successive cycles of replication.

    Hypothesis

    Three hypotheses had been previously proposed for th