Grooves
Twin helical strands form the DNA backbone. Another double helix may be found by  tracing the spaces, or grooves, between the strands. These voids are adjacent to  the base pairs and may provide a binding site. As the strands are not directly  opposite each other, the grooves are unequally sized. One groove, the major  groove, is 22 Å wide and the other, the minor groove, is 12 Å wide. The  narrowness of the minor groove means that the edges of the bases are more  accessible in the major groove. As a result, proteins like transcription factors  that can bind to specific sequences in double-stranded DNA usually make contacts  to the sides of the bases exposed in the major groove. This situation varies in  unusual conformations of DNA within the cell (see below), but the major and  minor grooves are always named to reflect the differences in size that would be  seen if the DNA is twisted back into the ordinary B form