History of Nucleic Acid Chemistry: Difference between revisions

From Nucleowiki
(Created page with " '''The History of Nucleic Acid Chemistry''' '''Milestones''' ''Isolation of DNA'' The person credited with being the first to isolate DNA was the Swiss physician Friedrich Miescher. He called the biochemical substance rich in phosphorus "nuclein". The initial work is dated as having occurred in early 1869.<sup>[1]</sup> Miescher worked at the University of Tübingen at the time, and did not know what the function of nuclein was. '''References''' [1]    R. Dah...")
 
(Cleaned up the page formatting, redid the numbering of the references and added links to the cited paper.)
Line 1: Line 1:
== '''The History of Nucleic Acid Chemistry''' ==


=== '''Milestones''' ===


'''The History of Nucleic Acid Chemistry'''
==== ''Isolation of DNA'' ====
 
 
'''Milestones'''
 
''Isolation of DNA''
 
The person credited with being the first to isolate DNA was the Swiss physician Friedrich Miescher. He called the biochemical substance rich in phosphorus "nuclein". The initial work is dated as having occurred in early 1869.<sup>[1]</sup> Miescher worked at the University of Tübingen at the time, and did not know what the function of nuclein was.  
The person credited with being the first to isolate DNA was the Swiss physician Friedrich Miescher. He called the biochemical substance rich in phosphorus "nuclein". The initial work is dated as having occurred in early 1869.<sup>[1]</sup> Miescher worked at the University of Tübingen at the time, and did not know what the function of nuclein was.  


 
== '''References''' ==
'''References'''
[1] R. Dahm, Friedrich Miescher and the discovery of DNA. Devel. Biol. 2005, 278, 274-288. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2004.11.028
 
[1]    R. Dahm, Friedrich Miescher and the discovery of DNA. ''Devel. Biol.'' '''2005''', ''278'', 274-288. DOI:10.1016/j.ydbio.2004.11.028

Revision as of 11:22, 5 August 2024

The History of Nucleic Acid Chemistry

Milestones

Isolation of DNA

The person credited with being the first to isolate DNA was the Swiss physician Friedrich Miescher. He called the biochemical substance rich in phosphorus "nuclein". The initial work is dated as having occurred in early 1869.[1] Miescher worked at the University of Tübingen at the time, and did not know what the function of nuclein was.

References

[1] R. Dahm, Friedrich Miescher and the discovery of DNA. Devel. Biol. 2005, 278, 274-288. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2004.11.028