DNA is the hereditary material found in most living organisms. It exists as a double-stranded helix, with each strand carrying a specific sequence of nitrogenous bases. When cells divide, the DNA must be accurately copied to ensure the transmission of genetic information. This accurate copying is referred to as DNA replication. Scientists over the years have performed several DNA replication experiments to understand how this process occurs.
One of the most renowned studies is Meselson and Stahl's experiment, which established that DNA replication is semi-conservative. This means that each newly formed DNA molecule comprises one original or “parental” strand and one newly synthesised strand. In this guide, we will explore the DNA replication steps, examine the DNA replication diagram, and clarify how the Meselson–Stahl experiment provided critical evidence for the semi-conservative model.
In 1958, Matthew Meselson and Franklin Stahl conducted a pioneering study using Escherichia coli. This experiment is considered one of the most elegant proofs of how DNA replicates.
Preparing Heavy DNA: The bacterial cells were first grown in a medium containing the heavier isotope of nitrogen 15N. Over many generations, the 15N got incorporated into the bacterial DNA.
Shifting to Light Medium: After ensuring that all the bacterial DNA was labelled with 15N (heavy nitrogen), the bacteria were transferred to a new medium containing the lighter isotope, 14N.
Sampling at Intervals: Samples of bacterial cells were taken at different times (every 20 minutes, which is roughly the time for one round of replication in E. coli). The DNA was then extracted and subjected to density-gradient centrifugation (commonly with caesium chloride, CsCl).
After 20 minutes (one replication cycle), The extracted DNA showed an intermediate density band (a hybrid of 15N and 14N. This finding ruled out the conservative DNA replication model, where one would expect distinct heavy and light bands.
After 40 minutes (two replication cycles), Two types of DNA bands were observed—one of intermediate density and one lighter band (consisting solely of 14N.
These observations led to the conclusion that DNA replication is semi-conservative. Each new DNA double helix contains one parental strand (the heavier one in the first generation) and one newly synthesised strand (the lighter one).
Before the acceptance of the semi-conservative model, scientists considered two alternative hypotheses:
Conservative DNA Replication: This model suggested that the entire original (parental) double helix remains intact after replication, and two completely new strands form a separate daughter double helix. In other words, the parental DNA is “conserved” wholly.
Dispersive DNA Replication: This model proposed that newly formed DNA strands are a patchwork of old and new DNA segments.
The Meselson and Stahl experiment effectively disproved these models by demonstrating the hybrid DNA band after the first replication cycle.
DNA replication follows a highly coordinated sequence of events:
Initiation
The double helix begins to unwind at specific sites called ‘origins of replication’.
Special proteins bind to these origins, and helicase enzymes separate the two strands by breaking hydrogen bonds between the base pairs.
Elongation
RNA primers are synthesised by primase to provide a starting point.
DNA polymerase extends the new strand by adding nucleotides complementary to the template strand.
One strand (leading strand) is synthesised continuously, while the other (lagging strand) is synthesised in short fragments called Okazaki fragments.
Termination
Once the entire region is replicated, the RNA primers are replaced with DNA.
Ligase enzymes join the Okazaki fragments.
The newly synthesised daughter strands wind together with their respective parental strands, forming two identical DNA double helices.
1. Which isotopes of nitrogen were used in the Meselson–Stahl experiment?
Answer:14N (light nitrogen) and 15N (heavy nitrogen).
2. Which enzyme is responsible for unwinding the DNA helix?
Answer: Helicase.
3. What is the direction of DNA strand elongation by DNA polymerase?
Answer: 5’ to 3’ direction.
4. Which newly synthesised strand is formed in short fragments?
Answer: The lagging strand (Okazaki fragments).
5. Why was the conservative model ruled out by the Meselson–Stahl experiment?
Answer: After one replication cycle in the light medium, only a single intermediate band was observed rather than distinct heavy and light DNA bands.
To keep the concept of semi-conservative DNA replication clear, Remember that “semi” means “half”. Hence, in each new double helix, half is the original strand, and half is newly formed.
1. Why is the Meselson–Stahl experiment important?
The experiment is hailed for conclusively demonstrating the semi-conservative mode of DNA replication, settling a long-standing debate on how genetic information is copied.
2. What would we see if DNA replication was fully conservative?
If replication were conservative, after one generation in a lighter isotope medium, you would observe two distinct bands in the density gradient—one fully heavy and one fully light.
3. What happens if an error occurs during replication?
DNA polymerases have proofreading capabilities that detect and correct mismatched nucleotides. If errors escape proofreading, they may result in mutations.
5. How does dispersive DNA replication differ from semi-conservative replication?
In dispersive replication, each daughter strand would be a blend of old and new DNA segments along its length. Semi-conservative replication retains one complete original strand in each daughter double helix.