genome sequences
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Genome Sequences
Ka-Lok Ng
Asia University
History of genome sequencing
• 1995, led by Craig Venter’s group, at the Institute of Genomic Research (TIGR) in Maryland
• Reported the complete DNA seq. of the bacterium Haemophilus influenzae
• The first viral genome seq. (phage phiX174) was produced by Fred Sanger’s group at 1978
• Insulin A, B chains( 胰島素 ) – the first determined amino acid sequence in 1951 by F. Sanger (Cambridge U)
• Sanger was awarded two Nobel prizes, the first one in 1958 on the structure of insulin, and the second one in 1980 (both in chemistry) for developing DNA sequencing techniques (with Paul Berg and Walter Gilbert)
Genome sequencing up to year 2001
http://www.biochem.arizona.edu/classes/bioc471/pages/Lecture7/Lecture7.html
Timeline of genome sequencing
http://www.biochem.arizona.edu/classes/bioc471/pages/Lecture7/Lecture7.html
First draft of human genome
F. Collins and C. Venter
Biological sequence space
• DNA sequence– a seq. of symbols from the alphabet A,
T, C, and G– IUPAC notation– R denotes A or G– Y denotes C or T– - denotes Gap
• RNA sequence– a seq. of symbols from the alphabet A,
U, C, and G– IUPAC notation– R denotes A or G– Y denotes C or U– - denotes Gap
• Protein sequence– a seq. of symbols from 20 alphabets
(except U,X, “J,O,B”, Z)
RNA secondary structure
Biological sequence space
• Convenient to model biological seq. as a one-dimensional (1D) object
• It is also incorrect• It neglects all the information that might be
contained in the 3D structure of the molecule• We make this approximation in this course
Building blocks of DNA sequences
• Backbone
• Pyrimidines – single ring–Thymine–Cytosine
• Purines – double rings–Adenosine–Guanin
Complementary (A,T), (C,G)
Building blocks of protein sequences
N-terminius, C-terminus (reading protein sequences from N to C)
peptide bond O==C –N-H, alpha carbon, the R group
Central dogma of molecular biology
More with coding DNADNA is a double strands, there are a total of 6 open reading frame (ORF)
Codon translation
Alternative splicing
Genome sequences
• Prokaryotic genomes– Eubacteria and archaes are the two major groups of prokaryotes organisms with
out nuclei– Generally have a single, circular genome between 0.5 and 1.3 Mbp long– Simple genes and genetic control seqs.
• Viral genomes– Not free-living organisms – Can be either single or double-stranded, and either DNA or RNA, that is ssDNA,
ssRNA, dsDNA ro dsRNA– HIV, SARS
• Eukaryotic genomes– Ranging in size from 8 Mb for some fungi to 670 Gbp– Human genome is about 3 Gbp long– Baker’s yeast, worm, zebra-fish, fruit-fly, mosquito; mammalian such as human,
mouse, and plants such as rice • Organellar genomes
– Mitochondrion (mtDNA) and chloroplast genome– Only hundreds or tens of thousand of bases long, circular, and contain a few ess
ential genes
Working with whole Genomes
Below is a circular representation of the E. coli.
DNA and Protein Sequences Databases
NCBI http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/
EMBL http://www.ebi.ac.uk/services/
DDBJ http://www.ddbj.nig.ac.jp/
Protein Sequence Databases
NCBI Molecular databases http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Database/ R SS qefeUniProt http://www.pir.uniprot.org/UniProt = Swiss-Prot + TrEMBL + PIR-PSD UniProt = UniProt Archive (UniParc) + UniProt Knowledgebase (UniProtKB) + UniProt nonredundant reference database (UniRef)ExPasy http://us.expasy.org/PIR http://www-nbrf.georgetown.edu/
The Entrez system
• Redundancy in GenBank• Many different GenBank entries are relevant to a specifi
c gene, esp. for human, E.coli, yeast, fruit fly• 4 entries encompass the same E.coli dUTPase gene
GenBank entries Sizes
X01714 1609
V01578 2568
L10328 136254
AE000441 10562
Entrez Gene
• Example: MEN1 AND human[ORGN]• where ORGN = organism
Entrez Gene
• Read the summary - Summary
• Official Symbol• Gene type• Gene name• Gene description• RefSeq status• Organism• Lineage• Gene aliases• Summary• Reference• Protein-protein interaction
FASTA format
Batch Entrez Gene
• NCBI site map
Batch Entrez Gene
• Retrieve multiple sequences information at one time
• Uniprot seq. ID, prepare a text file, and upload (use database = protein)
Q9XX00 Q8MQ56 Q9XWS4Q9XU77 Q9XWH5Q9N2K7
Eukaryotic entryexample: AF018430Use CoreNucleotide to search for the seq.
Retrieving GenBank entries without accession number• Entrez - human[organism] AND dUTPase[protein name] • AND must be in capital letters !
Whole Genome DB
• NCBI home page Genome Biology Entrez Genome Viral genome DB, Microbial genome ..etc )
Microbial genome – TIGR
• http://www.tigr.org/tdb/• Comprehensive Microbial Resource (CMR)
Genome databases
• allow you to browse genomes starting from chromosome down to a single gene, an individual exons or a nucleotide.
• Ensembl database• http://www.ensembl.org
• UCSC database• http://genome.ucsc.edu
Microbial Database : GOLD
• http://www.genomesonline.org
Statistical analysis of biological sequences
• Look for sequence structures in biological sequences, either DNA, RNA or protein seqs.
• Assuming one starts from 1D structure• Take DNA as an example, one expects the frequ
ency of appearance of nucleotide A, T, C and G are equal random sequence, %A = %T = %C = %G = 25%
• In actual DNA seq., this is not true !
Statistical analysis of DNA sequences
• Study the base composition• GC content• Frequent or rare words – words of length k• Biological relevance of unusual words (motifs)
Counting words in DNA seqs.
http://www.genomatix.de/cgi-bin/tools/tools.pl create seq. statistics
Counting words in DNA seqs.
• NCBI Genome (complete genome sequences) microbial Haemophilus influenzae Rd KW20 , NC_000907.1 (TIGR, dated on 1995) Link: RefSeq FTP or GenBank FTP (L42023.fna)
Counting words in Haemophilus influenzae genome
Total number of bp
GC content agree withNCBI record
Counting words in Haemophilus influenzae genome
• (%A) strand + = (%T) strand -,
• (%C) strand + = (%G) strand -,
• ….• Because of the complementary principle, i.e. A-
T, and C-G
Percentage of dinucleotide
Counting words in Haemophilus influenzae genome
Use L-k+1
Counting words in Haemophilus influenzae genome
• Nucleotide words of length 2 (called dimer) or higher (trimers, k-mers)
• Words of length k are called k-grams or k-tuples in computer science, or k-mer in biological science
Frequency of 3-mers
Finding unusual DNA words
• A simple statistical analysis can be used to find under- and over-representation of motifs ( 主題 , 基本花紋 ) (i.e. k-mers)
• Help us to decide when an observed bias is significant For the case of 2-mers• Compare the observed probability N of the 2-mers with the one expected un
der a background model, typically a multi-nomial model. The ratio between the two quantities indicates how much a certain word deviates from the background model and is called the odds ratio;
)()(
)(
yNxN
xyNrxy
where N(xy) is the frequency of the dinucleotide xy, N(x) and N(y) denote the frequency of the nucleotide x and y respectively.
rxy > 1 or rxy < 1 the xy nucleotide is considered of high or lower relative abundance compared with a random seq.
Finding unusual DNA words
• Clearly dimer deviate from value 1 are unusually represented, although the amount of deviation needed to consider this as a significant patterns needs to be analyzed with the tools discussed later in this course.
• The dimer GG looks extremely infrequent in that table but this analysis reveals that this is not likely to be a significant bias because the nucleotide G is low in frequency to begin with.
AA and TA seems to be unusual
Finding unusual DNA words
• the odds ratio can be generalized to a k-mers• For k-mers there are 4 to the k-th power, 4k, possible different patter
ns
)()....2()1(
)(
kNNN
merskNr mersk
Frequent words in H. influenzae,The words AAAGTGCGGT and ACCGCACTTT both appearing more than 500 times.
Biological relevance of unusual motifs
• Frequent words may be due to repetitive elements• Rare motifs include binding sites for transcription factors• Words such as CTAG that have undesirable structural
properties, because they lead to “kinking” of the DNAVirus vs. Bacteria• Words that are not compatible with the internal immune
system of a bacterium. Bacterial cells can be infected by viruses, and I response they produce restriction enzymes, proteins that are capable of cutting DNA at specific nucleotide words, known as restriction sites. The nucleotide motifs recognized by restriction enzymes are under-represented in many viral genomes, so as to avoid the bacterial hosts’ restriction enzymes.
Analyzing DNA seq.
http://bioweb.pasteur.fr/intro-uk.html#dna
Analyzing DNA seq. GC composition• Calculates the fractional GC content of nucleic acid sequences • C+G content, C ≡ G has a triple bond• GEECEE http://bioweb.pasteur.fr/seqanal/interfaces/geecee.html
Counting long words in DNA seqs.
• http://bioweb.pasteur.fr/intro-uk.html • Use AK003076 >gi|12833508|dbj|AK003076.1| Mus musculus adult male spleen cDNA, RIKEN full-le
ngth enriched library, clone:0910001I10 product:DUTPASE homolog [Mus musculus], full insert sequence GGCTTTTTCCACGCCCGCCGCCATGCCCTGCTCGGAAGATGCCGCGGCCGTCTCTGCCTCCAAGAGGGCT CGAGCGGAGGATGGCGCTTCTCTGCGCTTCGTGCGGCTCTCGGAGCACGCCACGGCGCCCACCCGCGGGT CCGCGCGCGCTGCCGGCTACGACCTATTCAGTGCCTATGATTATACAATATCACCCATGGAGAAAGCCAT CGTGAAGACAGACATTCAGATAGCTGTCCCTTCTGGGTGCTATGGAAGAGTAGCTCCACGTTCTGGCTTG GCTGTAAAGCACTTCATAGATGTAGGAGCTGGTGTCATAGACGAGGATTACAGAGGAAACGTTGGGGTCG TGCTGTTTAACTTTGGGAAAGAGAAGTTTGAAGTGAAAAAAGGTGATCGGATTGCGCAGCTCATCTGTGA GCGGATTTCTTATCCAGACTTAGAGGAAGTGCAGACCCTGGATGACACCGAGAGAGGCTCAGGAGGCTTC GGCTCCACCGGGAAGAATTAGAACTTTGCTGGAAGTATCTCGCTGTTTCAACACTGGAAACCAGAAGCTC TAACTTCGGAAGCATTTGGTGTTCTAGGATGCAGGAAAGGAGACCTCGATCACATCACGTTGGAACGATT CTGTTCCCTGGTTGAGGTCGCCTGTAAGTCTGCACTGTGAGCATGGCATTGACATGCAGACTTGGTAAAA CCCAGGGTACAGTTAGATTTTTTGTTGTTGTTGTATTATTTAAATTATAGCCTTCCAAAAACTGTTTTTG ATCATAATTGCTGTATCATTTGTAATTTT
TTTTAATCCAATAAAGTTGCTTTTAGC
Analyzing DNA seq. composition
Unusual words in different organisms or chromosomes
• The measure rxy is suitable for a single seq.. • In comparing seqs. from different organisms or chromosome account for
the complementary anti-parallel structure of DNA modify rxy• Reference: Burge, Campbell and Karlin (1992), PNAS, 89, 1358
Double helixS = 5’-ATCG....-3’ S = 5’-CAGT….-3’S
= 3’-TAGC….-5’ S = 3’-GTCA….-5’
• Let = inverted complementary seq., • X = A, T, C, G • , = species• fX = freq. of X for species
Observation• Chargaff’s rule double strands
total number of A/C = total number of T/G
Unusual words in different organisms or chromosomes
• Question: compare fX and fX
• need to consider the union of S and S
• why ? Let us consider the case in which one seq. with lots of A, and the other with lots of T in fact it has lots of A in the complementary seq. !
S = 5’-AAAACGT....-3’ S = 5’-TTTTCGA….-3’
S = 3’-TTTTGCA….-5’ S
= 3’-AAAAGCT….-5’• Need to symmetrize 對稱化 the nucleotide frequencies, take into account of complem
entary seq.
• Define S* = S + S fX* = (fX + f(X))/2
• * means the union, that is count the freq. of X in both strand and take the average
**
*)(
**
*)(
)(*
2
222
GC
AITA
TTIT
ATTAAIAA
ff
similarly
fff
fff
fffffff
Compare the double strand quantity f*, that is compare f*X and f*X
= inverted complement of X
Work with single DNA only, no need to find out the complementary seq.
Unusual words in different organisms or chromosomes
How about counting frequency of 2-mers ?
2
_
2
222
)(*)(
*
**
*)(
)(*
XYIXYXYIXY
ACGT
ACACIAC
GTACACGTGTIGTGT
ffff
generalin
ff
fff
fffffff
= inverted complement of XY
Unusual words in different organisms or chromosomes
How about the odd ratio for 2-mers ?
*)(
*
**
**
**
,_
,__
2___
))((
)(2
XYIXY
ACGT
ATCG
ACGT
TG
GTGT
rr
generalin
rrproofcanyou
mersotherforsimilar
ffff
ff
ff
fr
A conservative estimation of low and high odd ratios are less than 0.78 and higher than 1.22 respectively.
Unusual words in different organisms or chromosomes
How about the odd ratio for 3-mers ?
2
)(
,___,
)(*
***
*****
XYZIXYZXYZ
XNZYZXY
ZYXXYZXYZ
fff
andnucleotideanyisNwhere
fff
ffffr
Compare statistical properties (1-mer and 2-mers) of human and chimp
complete mitochondrial DNA
NC_001807 and NC_001643 Human Chimp
A (%) 30.86% 31.13%
C (%) 31.33% 30.80%
G (%) 13.16% 12.89%
T (%) 24.66% 25.18%
%245.222
16.1333.31
%76.272
66.2486.30
2
*
)(*
C
AIAA
f
fff
Human Chimp
%845.212
89.1280.30
%155.282
18.2513.31
2
*
)(*
C
AIAA
f
fff
Both species have similar fX
Compare statistical properties (1-mer and 2-mers) of human and chimp complete mitochondrial DNA
second nucleotide
A C G T
first A 0.0962 0.0902 0.0483 0.0738
nucl. C 0.0927 0.1074 0.0265 0.0868
G 0.0371 0.0432 0.0258 0.0254
T 0.0826 0.0725 0.0309 0.0606
second nucleotide
A C G T
first A 1.0042 0.8812 1.1750 1.0293
nucl. C 0.9664 1.1537 0.5742 1.0861
G 0.9819 1.0328 1.5773 0.7321
T 1.0352 0.9857 0.9296 1.0019
*)(
*XYIXY rr
Human Chimp
second nucleotide
A C G T
first A 1 2 3 4
nucl. C 5 6 7 3
G 8 7 6 2
T 4 8 5 1
symmetric
4x4 = 16, symmetric only need to compute 8 numbers not 16 !
Compare statistical properties (1-mer and 2-mers) of human and chimp complete mitochondrial DNA
wordtheofpercentagedenotespwhere
pppp
ppN
Nffff
Nff
ffff
ff
ff
fr
YIYXIX
XYIXY
YIYXIX
XYIXY
YIYXIX
XYIXY
YX
XYXY
______
))((
)(2
/)])([(
/)(2
))((
)(2
)()(
)(
2)()(
2)(
)()(
)(
**
**
See my human and chimp k-mers Excel file
Linguistic study of DNA sequences
• Does genomic sequences have any resemblance to a natural language ? open question !– Coding regions
• Bacteria: no introns• Archaea: some introns, TATA boxes• Eukarya: many introns and exons, TATA boxes
– Noncoding regions• Pseudogenes• Repetitive sequences
– Mini-satellites– Micro-satellites
– Alphabets, words, sentences– Coding regions words– Non-coding regions ?
How to obtain inverted complementary seq. ?
• Prepare a FASTA format file• Biological software web site http://bioweb.pasteur.fr/intro-uk.html#dna seq. tools
EMBOSS program name: revseq Advanced revseq form output file : outseq.out
GC content
Factors contributing to the variation of GC content
1.Environmental temperature
2.Levels of methylation
3.Recent transposon activity (DNA jumps around)• Over stretches of hundreds of kb, GC content sh
ould vary by <1% as a result of random sampling
• But most genomes show a bias ranging over as much as 30% !
GC content
Figure. Distribution of GC content along human chromosome 1. GC content varies between 20% and 65% at several different levels of resolution, including for the entire 220Mb of chromosome 1 average over 1-Mb windows (top) and within just 1 Mb for 200-bp windows (bottoms). A gap in the IHFSE seq. can be seen at the 400-kb mark on the 1-Mb scale.
GC content
• Karyotypic bands revealed by nuclear dyes such as Giemsa tend to correlate with GC content (dark bands being more AT-rich), possibly reflecting their propensity to coil into superstructure, but clearly other features of the DNA contribute to chromatin assembly.
• Chromosome is 2 ~ 3 cm long• The 46 chromosomes (over 1m long) a
re packed inside the nucleus with a size of 0.001 cm ! Amazing !!
• CpG dinucleotides are underrepresent
ed in mammalian genomes overall, but cluster as CpG islands between 0.5 and 2 kb in length that are significantly enriched just upstream of genes.
hsa-mir-639
UCSC database http://genome.ucsc.edu
Finding internal repeats in DNA seqs.
• tandem repeats, inverted repeat • repeats often involved in genome rearrangement
s or regulatory mechanisms of gene expression• tools result depend on scoring system and ranki
ng• Dot-plot approach http://arbl.cvmbs.colostate.ed
u/molkit/
Finding internal repeats in DNA seqs.
TF sequence
Transcription factor, TFIIIA for X.laevis, K02938>gi|214818|gb|K02938.1|XELTFIIIA X.laevis 5S RNA gene transcription factor (TFIIIA) mRNA, complete cdsGAATTCCGGAAGCCGAGGGCTGTTCAGTTGCTGAAGGAGAGATGGGAGAGAAGGCGCTGCCGGTGGTGTATAAGCGGTACATCTGCTCTTTCGCCGACTGCGGCGCTGCTTATAACAAGAACTGGAAACTGCAGGCGCATCTGTGCAAACACACAGGAGAGAAACCATTTCCATGTAAGGAAGAAGGATGTGAGAAAGGCTTTACCTCGCTTCATCACTTAACCCGCCACTCACTCACTCATACTGGCGAGAAAAACTTCACATGTGACTCGGATGGATGTGACTTGAGATTTACTACAAAGGCAAACATGAAGAAGCACTTTAACAGATTCCATAACATCAAGATCTGCGTCTATGTGTGCCATTTTGAGAACTGTGGCAAAGCATTCAAGAAACACAATCAATTAAAGGTTCATCAGTTCAGTCACACACAGCAGCTGCCATACGAATGTCCTCATGAAGGCTGTGACAAGCGGTTTTCTTTGCCTTCCCGTTTAAAACGTCATGAAAAAGTCCATGCAGGCTATCCCTGCAAAAAGGATGATTCTTGCTCATTTGTGGGAAAGACTTGGACATTATACTTGAAACACGTGGCAGAATGCCATCAGGACCTAGCAGTATGTGATGTGTGTAATCGAAAATTCAGGCACAAAGATTACTTGAGGGATCATCAGAAAACTCACGAAAAAGAGCGAACTGTGTATCTCTGCCCTCGAGATGGCTGTGACCGCTCCTATACCACTGCATTCAATCTTAGAAGCCATATACAATCATTTCATGAGGAACAGAGACCTTTTGTTTGTGAGCATGCTGGCTGCGGGAAATGCTTTGCAATGAAAAAAAGCCTAGAAAGACATTCAGTTGTACATGATCCAGAGAAGAGGAAGCTGAAGGAGAAATGCCCTCGCCCAAAGAGAAGCCTGGCCTCTCGCCTCACTGGATACATACCCCCCAAGAGCAAAGAAAAAAATGCATCCGTTTCGGGAACAGAAAAGACTGATTCACTTGTGAAAAATAAGCCCTCTGGCACTGAAACAAATGGCTCATTGGTTCTAGATAAATTAACTATACAATAATATAAGAAAACATTTAAATTTATTTTTTTATTTGTTAAAATTGCCCTCAGGATGGTTAACCCATATTTAGTGTGGGTTTTTTCTTTTTTTACAGCTTTAATTCATTTTTTTTCGGCTATAACAAAAGGAATCTGTTCTAGACGCATGATTTGTTTTATGAACTGCAGTATTGGCCATGCCTACAGGTAAAGGCACAGTGTTAATGGCTACATACCTCTTCTACCCCATGTTTGCTATTAAAAGTGAGGTGCAGCAGCCACTGGTCTGTTTATTTACAATACATTCATTTAGTAAGACTCTGTATTCATTTTCAAAAGAATCACTAAGGGAATGTGCAAAATTGTTATCACTCTACTGTAAACACAA
ATGTACTGCTTGCACCCTGTTGGTGGGGCTTTTTTTGGGGAGGTTGACTGACCCTGTTTTTTTTTTAACGGAATTC
Rosalind Franklin The Dark Lady of DNA (1920 ~ 1958)
By Brenda Maddox • Maddox tells her readers, in their Nobel acceptance
speeches in 1962 Watson and Crick made no mention of Rosalind Franklin at all. It was only Wilkins who “uttered” Franklin’s name, mentioning her as one of two people (the other being Alex Stokes), who “made very valuable contributions to the X-ray analysis.”
• Watson, Francis Crick, and Maurice Wilkins. The latter three received a Nobel Prize for their discovery in 1962. Franklin was ignored.
• For more about the story read http://www.humanistperspectives.org/issue151/books.html
Sodium deoxyribose nucleate from calf thymus, Structure B, Photo 51, taken by Rosalind Franklin and R G Gosling, 2 May 1952, with Linus Pauling’s holographic annotations to the right of the photo. This photo shows the double helices structure of DNA with a separation of 20A.
Discovery of the double helix structure of DNA
The discovery is based on three pieces of works1. Chargaff’s rule (discovered in 1949)
• Chargaff – an Austrian-American biochemist
• total number of A/C = total number of T/G2. Linus Pauling - discover the alpha-helix struct
ure of protein3. X-ray diffraction pattern of crystal
– Did by Rosalind Franklin– Crystal X-ray diffraction – by William Brag
g and his son William Junior Bragg
http://www.virtualsciencefair.org/2004/mcgo4s0/public_html/t2/dna.html
http://post.queensu.ca/~forsdyke/bioinfo1.htm
Erwin Chargaff (1905 -2002)
Discovery of the double helix structure of DNA
Linus Pauling • Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1954 • Nobel Peace Prize in 1963• who championed the use of Vitamin C, • live to be 93 (he died in 1994)• nature was a marvelous 令人驚異的 contrivanc
e 發明 , 想出的辦法 composed of molecules assembled by the Great Mechanic
• http://www.utoronto.ca/jpolanyi/public_affairs/public_affairs4i.html
• Watson and Crick conjectured that DNA is made up of two, three or four helices, but their model did not fit the X-ray data.
• They stop their work for almost one year• Crick continued his Ph.D thesis, Crick worked o
n his tobacco virus research • So as Pauling, he proposed the three helices m
odel of DNA. • They were wrong, because they did not know th
e complimentary principle yet.
Discovery of the double helix structure of DNA
• Watson and Crick also proposed DNA is made up of two exactly same helix with the same nucleotide on the opposite helix wrong
• Jerry Donohue, a visiting chemist at Cambridge from Cal-Tech, asserted that the shape of those DNA bases ought to be the keto form and not the enol form, as the textbooks of the day asserted.
• Armed now with the memory of Franklin’s clear photograph 51, this next to-last-step in the emergence of the final model was absolutely crucial.
Donohue (1920 – 1985)
Discovery of the double helix structure of DNA• “‘The point was important,’ [Crick] said,
‘because if the unit cell is strictly C2, one must have the DNA chains in pairs, running in opposite directions.’”
• This scientific point was crucial for
Watson and Crick. In separate papers published that same year, Franklin had said that “C2 is the only space group possible.” Why, Maddox wonders, had Watson or Crick failed to mention the importance of this in either of their Nature papers of 1953?
• A physicist, he worked with John Randall in the late 1930s on the development of radar, moving to the USA during World War II to work on the Manhattan project. After the War he joined Randall at King's College London and with Rosalind Franklin began an investigation into the structure of DNA.
Watson (1928-) and Crick (1916-2004)
Maurice Wilkins (1916-2004)
Diffraction of X ray by crystal
• Max von Laue who was awarded the Nobel prize for physics in 1914 "for his discovery of the diffraction of X-rays by crystals". His collaborators Walter Friedrich and Paul Knipping took the picture on the right in 1912.
• http://cxpi.spme.monash.edu.au/xray_history.htm
Max von Laue (1897-1960)
A beam of X-rays is scattered into a characteristic pattern by a crystal. In this case it is copper sulphate.
Diffraction of X ray by crystal
• Sir William Lawrence Bragg, Australian born British physicist, won the Nobel prize (1915) with his father William Henry Bragg "for their services in the analysis of crystal structure by means of Xrays“, when he was only 25 years old. William Henry Bragg
(1862-1942) William Lawrence Bragg
(1890-1971)
Bragg’s law of diffraction
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