The
Avery-MacLeod-McCarty experiment was an
experimental demonstration, reported in 1944 by
Oswald Avery,
Colin
MacLeod, and
Maclyn McCarty, that
DNA is the substance that causes
bacterial transformation.
It was the
culmination of research in the 1930s and early 1940s at the
Rockefeller Institute for Medical
Research
to purify and characterize the "transforming
principle" responsible for the transformation phenomenon first
described in Griffith's
experiment of 1928: killed Streptococcus pneumoniae of
the virulent strain type III-S, when
injected along with living but non-virulent type II-R pneumococci,
resulted in a deadly infection of type III-S pneumococci. In
their paper "
Studies on the Chemical Nature of the Substance
Inducing Transformation of Pneumococcal Types: Induction of
Transformation by a Desoxyribonucleic Acid Fraction Isolated from
Pneumococcus Type III", published in the February 1944 issue
of the
Journal of
Experimental Medicine, Avery and his colleagues suggest
that DNA, rather than protein as widely believed at the time, may
be the hereditary material of bacteria, and could be analogous to
genes and/or
viruses in
higher organisms.
Background
With the development of
serological
typing, medical researchers were able to sort bacteria into
different
strains, or
types. When a person or test animal (e.g., a
mouse) is
inoculated with a
particular type, an
immune response
ensues, generating
antibodies that react
specifically with
antigens on the bacteria.
Blood serum containing the antibodies
can then be extracted and applied to
cultured bacteria. The antibodies will
react with other bacteria of the same type as the original
inoculation.
Fred Neufeld, a German
bacteriologist, had discovered the pneumococcal types and
serological typing; until
Frederick
Griffith's studies bacteriologists believed that the types were
fixed and unchangeable from one generation to the next .
Griffith's experiment,
reported in 1928, identified that some "transforming principle" in
pneumococcal bacteria could transform them from one type to
another. Griffith, a British medical officer, had spent years
applying serological typing to cases of
pneumonia, a frequently fatal disease in the early
20th century. He found that multiple types—some virulent and some
non-virulent—were often present over the course of a clinical case
of pneumonia, and thought that one type might change into another
(rather than simply multiple types being present all along). In
testing that possibility, he found that transformation could occur
when dead bacteria of a virulent type and live bacteria of a
non-virulent type were both injected in mice: the mice would
develop a fatal infection (normally only caused by live bacteria of
the virulent type) and live, virulent bacteria could be isolated
from such infected mice.
The findings of Griffith's experiment were soon confirmed, first by
Fred Neufeld at the
Koch Institute and by
Martin Henry Dawson at the Rockefeller
Institute. A series of Rockefeller Institute researchers continued
to study transformation in the years that followed. With
Richard H. P. Sia,
Dawson developed a method of transforming bacteria
in vitro (rather than
in vivo as Griffith had done). After Dawson's
departure in 1930,
James Alloway took
up the attempt to extend Griffith's findings, resulting in the
extraction of
aqueous solutions of
the transforming principle by 1933. Colin MacLeod worked to purify
such solutions from 1934 to 1937, and the work was continued in
1940 and completed by Maclyn McCarty.
Experimental work
Pneumococcus is characterized by
smooth colonies and has a
polysaccharide capsule that induces
antibody formation; the different types are
classified according to their immunological specificity.
The purification procedure consisted of first killing the bacteria
with heat and
extracting
the
saline-soluble components. Next,
the protein was
precipitated out using
chloroform and the polysaccharide capsules were
hydrolyzed with an
enzyme. An immunological precipitation caused by
type-specific antibodies was used to verify the complete
destruction of the capsules. Then, the active portion was
precipitated out by alcohol
fractionation, resulting in fibrous strands
that could be removed with a stirring rod.
Chemical analysis showed that the proportions of carbon, hydrogen,
nitrogen, and phosphorus in this active portion were consistent
with the chemical composition of DNA. To show that it was DNA
rather than some small amount of
RNA,
protein, or some other cell component that was
responsible for transformation, Avery and his colleagues used a
number of biochemical tests. They found that
trypsin,
chymotrypsin
and
ribonuclease (enzymes that break
apart proteins or RNA) did not affect it, but an enzyme preparation
of "desoxyribonucleodepolymerase" (a crude preparation, obtainable
from a number of animal sources, that could break down DNA)
destroyed the extract's transforming power.
Followup work in response to criticism and challenges included the
purification and crystallization, by
Moses
Kunitz in 1948, of a DNA depolymerase (
deoxyribonuclease I), and precise work
by
Rollin Hotchkiss showing that
virtually all the detected nitrogen in the purified DNA came from
glycine, a breakdown product of the
nucleotide base adenine, and that undetected protein contamination
was at most 0.02% by Hotchkiss's estimation.
Reception and legacy
The experimental findings of the Avery-MacLeod-McCarty experiment
were quickly confirmed, and extended to other hereditary
characteristics besides polysaccharide capsules. However, there was
considerable reluctance to accept the conclusion that DNA was the
genetic material. According to
Phoebus
Levene's influential "
tetranucleotide hypothesis", DNA
consisted of repeating units of the four nucleotide bases and had
little biological specificity. DNA was therefore thought to be the
structural component of
chromosomes,
whereas the genes were thought likely to be made of the protein
component of chromosomes. This line of thinking was reinforced by
the 1935 crystallization of
tobacco
mosaic virus by
Wendell Stanley,
and the parallels among viruses, genes, and enzymes; many
biologists thought genes might be a sort of "super-enzyme", and
viruses were shown according to Stanley to be proteins and to share
the property of
autocatalysis with
many enzymes. Furthermore, few biologists thought that genetics
could be applied to bacteria, since they lacked
chromosomes and
sexual reproduction. In particular, many
of the geneticists known informally as the
phage group, which would become influential in
the new discipline of
molecular
biology in the 1950s, were dismissive of DNA as the genetic
material (and were inclined to avoid the "messy" biochemical
approaches of Avery and his colleagues). Some biologists, including
fellow Rockefeller Institute Fellow
Alfred
Mirsky, challenged Avery's finding that the transforming
principle was pure DNA, suggesting that protein contaminants were
instead responsible. Although transformation occurred in some kinds
of bacteria, it could not be replicated in other bacteria (nor in
any higher organisms), and its significance seemed limited
primarily to medicine.
Scientists looking back on the Avery-MacLeod-McCarty experiment
have disagreed about just how influential it was in the 1940s and
early 1950s.
Gunther Stent suggested
that it was largely ignored, and only celebrated
afterwards—similarly to
Gregor
Mendel's work decades before the rise of
genetics. Others, such as
Joshua Lederberg and
Leslie C. Dunn,
attest to its early significance and cite the experiment as the
beginning of
molecular
genetics.
A few microbiologists and geneticists had taken an interest in the
physical and chemical nature of genes before 1944, but the
Avery-MacLeod-McCarty experiment brought renewed and wider interest
in the subject. While the original publication did not mention
genetics specifically, Avery as well as many of the geneticists who
read the paper were aware of the genetic implications—that Avery
may have isolated the gene itself as pure DNA. Biochemist
Erwin Chargaff, geneticist
H. J. Muller and others praised the result as
establishing the biological specificity of DNA and as having
important implications for genetics if DNA played a similar role in
higher organisms. In 1945, the
Royal
Society awarded Avery the
Copley
Medal, in part for his work on bacterial transformation.
Between 1944 and 1954, the paper was cited at least 239 times (with
citations spread evenly though those years), mostly in papers on
microbiology, immunochemistry, and biochemistry. In addition to the
follow-up work by McCarty and others at the Rockefeller Institute
in response to Mirsky's criticisms, the experiment spurred
considerable work in microbiology, where it shed new light on the
analogies between bacterial heredity and the genetics of
sexually-reproducing organisms. French microbiologist
André Boivin claimed to extend Avery's
bacterial transformation findings to
Escherichia coli, although this could
not be confirmed by other researchers. In 1946, however, Joshua
Lederberg and
Edward Tatum demonstrated
bacterial conjugation in
E. coli and showed that genetics could apply bacteria,
even if Avery's specific method of transformation was not general.
Avery's work also may have played a role in the continuation of
X-ray crystallography studies
of DNA by
Maurice Wilkins, who faced
pressure from his funders to make whole cells, rather than
biological molecules, the subject of his research.
Despite the significant number of citations to the paper and
positive responses it received in the years following publication,
Avery's work was largely neglected by much of the scientific
community. Although received positively by many scientists, the
experiment did not seriously affect mainstream genetics research,
in part because it made little difference for classical genetics
experiments in which genes were defined by their behavior in
breeding experiments rather than their chemical makeup. H. J.
Muller, while interested, was focused more on physical rather than
chemical studies of the gene, as were most of the members of the
phage group. Avery's work was also
neglected by the
Nobel Foundation,
which later expressed public regret for failing to award Avery a
Nobel Prize.
By the time of the 1952
Hershey-Chase experiment,
geneticists were more inclined to consider DNA as the genetic
material, and
Alfred Hershey was an
influential member of the phage group. Erwin Chargaff had shown
that the base composition of DNA varies by species (contrary to the
tetranucleotide hypothesis), and in 1952 Rollin Hotchkiss published
his experimental evidence both confirming Chargaff's work and
demonstrating the absence of protein in Avery's transforming
principle. Furthermore, the field of
bacterial genetics was quickly becoming
established, and biologists were more inclined to think of heredity
in the same terms for bacteria and higher organisms. After Hershey
and Chase used
radioactive
isotopes to show that it was primarily DNA, rather than
protein, that entered bacteria upon infection with
bacteriophage, it was soon widely accepted
that DNA was the genetic material. Despite the much less precise
experimental results (they found a not-insignificant amount of
protein entering the cells as well as DNA), the Hershey-Chase
experiment was not subject to the same degree of challenge. Its
influence was boosted by the growing network of the phage group
and, the following year, by the publicity surrounding the DNA
structure proposed by
Watson and
Crick (Watson was also a member of the phage group). Only in
retrospect, however, did either experiment definitively prove that
DNA is the genetic material.
Notes
- Fruton (1999), pp. 438–440
- Lehrer, Steven. Explorers of the Body. 2nd edition. iuniverse
2006 p 46 [1]
- Neufeld, Fred, and Walter Levinthal. " Beitrage
zur Variabilitat der Pneumokokken", Zeitschrift fur
Immunitatsforschung, volume 55 (1928): 324–340.
- Dawson, Martin H. " The
Interconvertibility of 'R' and 'S' Forms of Pneumococcus",
Journal of Experimental Medicine, volume 47, no. 4 (1
April 1928): 577–591.
- Dawson, Martin H., and Richard H. P. Sia. " The
Transformation of Pneumococcal Types In Vitro."
Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and
Medicine, volume 27 (1930): 989–990.
- Fruton (1999), p. 438
- The Oswald T. Avery Collection: " Shifting Focus: Early Work on Bacterial
Transformation, 1928-1940." Profiles in Science. U.S.
National Library of Medicine. Accessed February 25, 2009.
- Fruton (1999), p. 439
- Morange (1998), pp. 30–39
- Fruton (1999), pp. 440–441
- On the intersecting theories of viruses, genes and enzymes in
this period, see: Creager, Angela N. H. The Life of a Virus:
Tobacco Mosaic Virus as an Experimental Model, 1930–1965.
University of Chicago Press: Chicago, 2002. ISBN 0-226-12025-2
- Deichmann, pp. 220–222
- Deichmann, pp. 207–209
- Deichmann, pp. 215–220
- Boivin published a number of papers on bacterial
transformation, beginning with: André Boivin, Roger Vendrely, and
Yvonne Lehoult, "L’acide thymonucléique hautement polymerise,
principe capable de conditioner la spécificité sériologique et
l’équipement enzymatique des Bactéries. Conséquences pour la
biochemie de l’hérédité" Compte rendus, volume 221 (1945),
pp. 646–648.
- Deichmann, pp. 227–231
- Morange (1998), pp. 44–50
- Fruton (1999), pp. 440–442
- Hotchkiss, Roland D. "The role of deoxyribonucleotides in
bacterial transformations", in Phosphorus Metabolism,
edited by W. D. McElroy and B. Glass. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins
University Press, pp. 426–436.
References
- Fruton, Joseph S. Proteins, Enzymes, Genes: The Interplay
of Chemistry and Biology. Yale University Press: New Haven,
1999. ISBN 0-300-07608-8
- Morange, Michel. A History of Molecular Biology.
Translated by Matthew Cobb. Harvard University Press: Cambridge,
Massachusetts, 1998. ISBN 0-674-00169-9
Further reading
External links