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DNA Directly Photographed

larry Strong

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DNA directly photographed for the first time. It is reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions of the Copyright Act from Yahoo news.

Fifty-nine years after James Watson and Francis Crick deduced the double-helix structure of DNA, a scientist has captured the first direct photograph of the twisted ladder that props up life.

Enzo Di Fabrizio, a physics professor at the Magna Graecia University in Catanzaro, Italy, snapped the picture using an electron microscope.

Previously, scientists had only seen DNA's structure indirectly. The double-corkscrew form was first discovered using a technique called X-ray crystallography, in which a material's shape is reconstructed based on how X-rays bounce after they collide with it.

But Di Fabrizio and his colleagues developed a plan to bring DNA out of hiding. They built a nanoscopic landscape of extremely water-repellant silicon pillars. When they added a solution that contained strands of DNA into this scene, the water quickly evaporated and left behind cords of bare DNA that stretched like tightropes between the tiny mesas.

They then shone beams of electrons through holes in the silicon bed, and captured high-resolution images of the illuminated molecules.

Di Fabrizio's images actually show a thread of several interwoven DNA molecules, as opposed to just two coupled strands. This is because the energy of the electrons used would be enough to destroy an isolated double helix, or a single strand from a double helix.

But with the use of more sensitive equipment and lower energy electrons, Di Fabrizio thinks that snapshots of individual double helices will soon be possible, reports New Scientist.

Molecules of DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, store the genetic instructions that govern all living organisms' growth and function.

Di Fabrizio's innovation will allow scientists to vividly observe interactions between DNA and some of life's other essential ingredients, such as RNA (ribonucleic acid). The results of Di Fabrizio's work were published in the journal NanoLetters.

Go to the link for the photo's

Larry
http://news.yahoo.com/dna-directly-photographed-first-time-193138553.html




 
Just realized I posted this in the Military Current Affairs and News. Could a mod move it to the appropriate thread.....

Thanks
Larry
 
This might be appropriate under the "Recent Warfare technologies" thread, since DNA has been touted as a medium for high density information storage. Seeing and manipulating DNA on that scale is a big step forward in making it a usable technology and not a curiosity.
 
Thanks for posting.  I know what the kids in my class are going to be looking at Monday morning now.  :)
 
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