Raymond Gosling (15 July 1926 – 18 May 2015) is the forgotten hero of DNA. As a lowly PhD student at King’s College, London, he took the famous “Photo 51” of DNA, but is not often given credit for doing so, perhaps because he was caught up in a story that was bigger than he was. A timeline helps elucidate the saga:
1949: Gosling joins King’s College as a PhD student under Maurice Wilkins.
1950: Gosling obtains the first clear X-ray image of DNA, using techniques developed with Wilkins. Wilkins presents this image at a conference in Naples in May, where it excites James Watson.
1951: Rosalind Franklin joins King’s College, taking over much of Wilkins’ work, which causes considerable friction. Gosling is told to transfer from supervision by Wilkins to supervision by Franklin.
November 1951: Franklin gives a talk suggesting that DNA is a helix (see her notes). Watson attends the talk, and later he and Francis Crick reveal a helical DNA model that turns out to be wrong.
May 1952: Gosling takes the famous “Photo 51” of DNA’s “B” form (below – and hear his account here), but Franklin requires him to work with her on the “A” form, which is much more difficult to analyse.
June 1952: Franklin begins making arrangements to leaves King’s College London for Birckbeck College.
July 1952: Based on the “A” form studies, Franklin decides that DNA is not a helix, and produces a mock death notice for the concept (below).
January 1953: At Franklin’s suggestion, Gosling gives his “Photo 51” to Wilkins, who shows it to Watson a few days later. Watson immediately realises that it very clearly reveals a helix.
February 1953: Linus Pauling in the USA publishes a three-chain helical structure for DNA. This is a massive blunder – Pauling had forgotten that DNA is deoxyribonucleic acid – but it puts pressure on Watson and Crick to discover the DNA structure before Pauling fixes his mistake.
March 1953: Watson and Crick finish building their final DNA model, which integrates knowledge of the helix with their idea for AT and GC base pair bonding – and a great deal of effort in trying to make metal scale models of the molecules fit together in accordance with the laws of chemistry. That same month, Franklin leaves King’s College London, but continues to co-author papers with Gosling.
April 1953: Three DNA papers appear in Nature (without peer review!):
- J. D. Watson & F. H. C. Crick: “Molecular Structure of Nucleic Acids: A Structure for Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid”
- M. H. F. Wilkins, A. R. Stokes & H. R. Wilson: “Molecular Structure of Nucleic Acids: Molecular Structure of Deoxypentose Nucleic Acids”
- Rosalind E. Franklin & R. G. Gosling: “Molecular Configuration in Sodium Thymonucleate” (including Photo 51)
All three teams acknowledge each other – Watson and Crick acknowledge the unpublished work of the others; Wilkins and Stokes acknowledge discussions with the others; Franklin and Gosling acknowledge discussions with Wilkins, Stokes, and Crick.
1954: Gosling completes his thesis.
April 1958: Franklin dies of ovarian cancer. In the last years of her life, she, Watson, and Crick were close friends, and she recuperated from medical treatment at the home of Crick and his wife.
1962: Crick, Watson, and Wilkins share the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Franklin is ineligible because Nobel Prizes cannot be posthumous, but Gosling gets nothing either. He is not the first PhD student to have their contribution go unrecognised. Or the last.
Sorry to break it to y’all but Raymond Gosling did not take photo 51 Rosalind Franklin did!
Although many people think that, it’s a myth. Gosling took the famous photograph, as Nature confirms.
Rosalind Franklin was Gosling’s PhD supervisor at the time, but Gosling was working largely independently (because Franklin didn’t want him to work on the ‘B’ form).