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Rosalind Franklin: DNA's unsung hero - Cláudio L. Guerra

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    The discovery of the structure of DNA
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    was one of the most important scientific
    achievements in the last century,
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    in human history, in fact.
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    The now-famous double helix is almost
    synonymous with Watson and Crick,
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    two of the scientists who won
    the Nobel Prize for figuring it out.
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    But there's another name
    you may know, too,
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    Rosalind Franklin.
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    You may have heard that her data supported
    Watson and Crick's brilliant idea,
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    or that she was a plain-dressing,
    belligerent scientist,
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    which is how Watson actually described her
    in the Double Helix.
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    But thanks to Franklin's biographers,
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    who investigated her life
    and interviewed many people close to her,
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    we now know that that account
    is far from true,
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    and her scientific contributions
    have been vastly underplayed.
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    Let's hear the real story.
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    Rosalind Elsie Franklin was born
    in London in 1920.
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    She wanted to be a scientist ever
    since we was a teenager,
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    which wasn't a common or easy
    career path for girls at that time.
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    But she excelled at science anyway.
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    She won a scholarship to Cambridge
    to study chemistry,
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    where she earned her Ph.D.,
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    and she later conducted research on
    the structure of coal
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    that led to better gas masks for
    the British during World War II.
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    In 1951, she joined King's College
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    to use x-ray techniques to study
    the structure of DNA,
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    then one of the hottest topics in science.
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    Franklin upgraded the x-ray lab
    and got to work
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    shining high-energy x-rays
    on tiny, wet crystals of DNA.
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    But the acadmemic culture at the time
    wasn't very friendly to women,
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    and Fraklin was isolated
    from her colleagues.
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    She clashed with Maurice Wilkins,
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    a labmate who assumed Franklin
    had been hired as his assistant.
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    But Franklin kept working,
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    and in 1952, she obtained Photo 51,
    the most famous x-ray image of DNA.
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    Just getting the image took 100 hours,
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    the calculations necessary to analyze it
    would take a year.
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    Meanwhile, the American biologist
    James Watson
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    and the British physicist Francis Crick
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    were also working
    on finding DNA's structure.
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    Without Franklin's knowledge,
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    Wilkins took Photo 51
    and showed it to Watson and Crick.
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    Instead of calculating the exact
    position of every atom,
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    they did a quick analysis
    of Franklin's data
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    and used that to build
    a few potential structures.
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    Eventually, they arrived at the right one.
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    DNA is made of two helicoidal strands,
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    one opposite the other with bases
    in the center like rungs of a ladder.
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    Watson and Crick published their model
    in April 1953.
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    Meanwhile,
    Franklin had finished her calculations,
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    comes to the same conclusion,
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    and submitted her own manuscript.
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    The journal published
    the manuscripts together,
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    but put Franklin's last,
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    making it look like her experiments just
    confirmed Watson and Crick's breakthrough
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    instead of inspiring it.
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    But Franklin had already
    stopped working on DNA
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    and died of cancer in 1958,
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    never knowing that Watson and Crick
    had seen her photographs.
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    Watson, Crick, and Wilkins won
    the Nobel Prize in 1962
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    for their work on DNA.
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    It's often said that Franklin would have
    been recognized by a Nobel Prize
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    if only they could be
    awarded posthumously.
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    And in fact, it's possible
    she could have won twice.
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    Her work on the structure of viruses
    led to a Nobel for a colleague in 1982.
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    It's time to tell the story of a brave
    woman who fought sexism in science,
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    and whose work revolutionized
    medicine, biology, and agriculture.
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    It's time to honor
    Rosalind Elsie Franklin,
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    the unsung mother of the double helix.
Title:
Rosalind Franklin: DNA's unsung hero - Cláudio L. Guerra
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:10

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