Polymerase Chain Reaction
Introduction
• PCR, polymerase chain reaction, is an in-
vitro technique for amplification of a region
of DNA whose sequence is known or which
lies between two regions of known
sequence
• Before PCR, DNA of interest could only be
amplified by over-expression in cells and
this with limited yield
• 1966, Thomas Brock discovers Thermus
Aquaticus, a thermostable bacteria in the
hot springs of Yellowstone National Park
• 1983, Kary Mullis postulated the concept of
PCR ( Nobel Prize in 1993)
• 1985, Saiki publishes the first application of
PCR ( beta-Globin)
• 1985, Cetus Corp. Scientists isolate
Thermostable Taq Polymerase (from
T.Aquaticus), which revolutionized PCR
Reaction Components
• DNA template
• Primers
• Enzyme
• dNTPs
• Mg2+
• buffers
1- DNA template
• DNA containing
region to be
sequenced
• Size of target DNA
to be amplified : up
to 3 Kb
2- Primers
• 2 sets of primers
• Generally 20-30
nucleotides long
• Synthetically
produced
• complimentary to the
3’ ends of target DNA
• not complimentary to
each other
Primers (ctnd)
• Not containing inverted repeat sequences to
avoid formation of internal structures
• 40-60% GC content preferred for better
annealing
• Tm of primers can be calculated to
determine annealing T0
• Tm= .41(%G+C) + 16.6log(J+) + 81.5
where J+ is the concentration of monovalent
ions
3-Enzyme
• Usually Taq Polymerase or anyone of the
natural or Recombinant thermostable
polymerases
• Stable at T0 up to 950 C
• High processivity
• Taq Pol has 5’-3’ exo only, no proofreading
The PCR Cycle
• Comprised of 3 steps:
- Denaturation of DNA at 950C
- Primer hybridization ( annealing) at 40-
500C
- DNA synthesis ( Primer extension) at
720C
Standard thermocycle
RT-PCR
• Reverse Transcriptase PCR
• Uses RNA as the initial template
• RNA-directed DNA polymerase (rTh)
• Yields ds cDNA
Detection of amplification
products
• Gel electrophoresis
• Sequencing of amplified fragment
• Southern blot
• etc...
Applications
• Genome mapping and gene function
determination
• Biodiversity studies ( e.g. evolution studies)
• Diagnostics ( prenatal testing of genetic
diseases, early detection of cancer, viral
infections...)
• Detection of drug resistance genes
• Forensic (DNA fingerprinting)
Advantages
• Automated, fast, reliable (reproducible)
results
• Contained :(less chances of contamination)
• High output
• Sensitive
• Broad uses
• Defined, easy to follow protocols
References
• Fundamentals of Biochem ( Voet, Voet,
Pratt)
• Molecular Cell Biology ( Lodish, Darnell..)
Next Steps
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