Narrator: Maurice Wilkins had worked as a physicist on the atom bomb during the war, and had turned in disgust on what he felt was
the way science had been misapplied, to biology. With an interest in the gene kindled by reading a little book called What Is Life?, in which the theoretical physicist Erwin Schrödinger had speculated that the gene consists of a three-dimensional arrangement
of atoms, he found himself at the Kings College, London, using x-ray diffraction to study the structure of DNA.
Maurice Wilkins: One of the reasons I think we got better diffraction results than Astbury, one of the main reasons, was that we had better
DNA made by Signer in Switzerland. This sort of shows a basic principle here in scientific advance; that one was very dependent
on all the essential work that was done by chemists and biochemists. The x-ray and model building work was a little sort of
pinnacle, put on top of this wide and essential base.
Also an important factor was that I think we had a feeling of how to treat the molecule right; that, as Bernal had found with
protein crystals, you needed to keep them in the aqueous environment. We also sort of lined the molecules up, especially parallel
in fibers.
I was in Naples actually, because I wanted to get DNA in real cells - in the chromosomes, in the sperm heads of various creatures
out of the Bay of Naples. At that time one had very little idea about whether the DNA which chemists produced bore any resemblance
to the DNA in a chromosome in a cell. In fact, the x-ray diffraction results gave good evidence that it did.