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Biophysical Journal 1: 525-537 (1961)
© 1961 the Biophysical Society
ABSTRACT
Small-angle x-ray scattering studies on an absolute scale have been carried out on isotropic solutions of high molecular weight RNA obtained from ascites tumor cells, E. coli, and yeast. It was found that in all three cases the RNA is composed of short rigid rods (50 to 150Å in length) joined by small flexible regions. The rods account for almost the entire structure (at least 90 per cent); their radius of gyration about the axis and their mass per unit length are similar to those of DNA, suggesting a double-stranded helical structure. The rods are joined in an array forming the compact RNA molecule. On thermal degradation, the molecular superstructure disappears while the rods persist.
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