Matthew Meselson (born May 24, 1930, Denver, Colorado, U.S.) is an American molecular biologist notable for his experimental confirmation of the Watson-Crick theory of the structure and method of replication of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).
Meselson obtained a Ph.D. at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena, in 1957. His research, with Franklin W. Stahl, showed that during cell division the replication of DNA in the cell is “semi-conservative”; that is, the DNA splits into its two component strands, each of which acquires a newly synthesized partner before passing into one of the daughter cells. Bacteria cultured in a nutrient containing a heavy isotope of nitrogen incorporated it in their DNA. When the bacteria were returned to nutrients containing ordinary nitrogen, their reproduction formed cells that had a new medium-weight DNA. (A new technique, density-gradient centrifugation, could be used to separate such molecules by weight.) On heating, this DNA separated into half heavy and half light strands. Meselson and Stahl concluded that the new DNA molecules were composed of one strand of each: the heavy inherited, the light newly synthesized. Meselson was on the staff at Caltech until 1960, when he was appointed associate professor of biology at Harvard University.
A series of experiments conducted with the assistance of French biologist François Jacob and South African biologist Sydney Brenner in 1960 determined that ribosomes were responsible for the assembly of proteins. Using Escherichia coli cultures infected with T4 bacteriophages and then exposed to a radioactive substance, the researchers were able to trace the newly produced (and radioactive) viral RNA to the bacterial ribosomes. In addition to confirming that ribosomes synthesized proteins, the experiment led to the formation of the messenger RNA (mRNA) hypothesis, confirmed in 1964. In 1975 Meselson, along with American geneticist Charles Radding, proposed a revised model of genetic recombination that accounted for the formation of an asymmetric heteroduplex; the model was known as the Meselson-Radding model. Meselson’s later work concentrated on the anomalous evolutionary success of bdelloid rotifers, a type of invertebrate that reproduces solely through asexual means.
Meselson also campaigned actively against chemical and biological weapons. In 1990 he became codirector of the Harvard Sussex Program on Chemical and Biological Weapons Armament and Arms Limitation, a post he held for a number of years. From 1992 to 1994 Meselson investigated the 1979 anthrax leak in Sverdlovsk, Russia, U.S.S.R., eventually determining that the leak had come from a nearby bioweapons facility.
Meselson was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1962), the National Academy of Sciences (1968), and the Royal Society (1984).