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Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

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Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions
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Page 1: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

Polymerase Chain Reaction

Mrs. StewartMedical Interventions

Page 2: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

Polymerase Chain Reaction

a lab technique that produces numerous copies of a specific segment of our DNA in a relatively short period of time. three-step processrepeated over and overproduces identical copies of the target

sequence.

Page 3: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.
Page 4: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

Kary Mullis

1983 – Mullis and his colleagues invented the PCR technique

Nobel Prize in 1993 

Page 5: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

PCR components

DNA (Taq) polymeras

e

Primers Nucleotides

Target DNA

sequence

Page 6: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

Taq PolymeraseThe most widely used polymerase is

that from Thermus aquaticus (Taq) – Thermophilic bacteria

Thermophilic bacterium lives in hot springs and capable of growing at 70 -75 C

Page 7: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

3 steps in a PCR

1.Denature

2.Anneal

3.Extension

Page 8: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

DenatureThe DNA is heated to 95oC, causing

the double stranded DNA to denature by breaking the hydrogen bonds between the strands.

Page 9: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

Denaturation

Page 10: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

AnnealThe temperature of the sample is

lowered to between 32-72oC, causing the primers to hybridize or "anneal" to their complementary sequences on either side of the target sequence.

Page 11: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

Anneal

Page 12: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

ExtensionThe temperature of the sample is

heated to between 72-75oC, which is the optimal temperature for the Taq polymerase enzyme to function.

Taq polymerase binds and extends a complementary DNA strand from each primer (adding approximately 60 bases per second, using the free-floating nucleotides)

Page 13: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

Extension

Page 14: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

As amplification proceeds, the DNA sequence between primers doubles after each cycles

(The amplification of the target sequence proceeding in an exponential fashion ( 1 2 4 8 16................) up to million of times the starting amount until enough is present to be seen by gel electrophoresis.

Page 15: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

How many cycles?Most PCRs should include only 25 –

35 cycles. Depends on the amount of

starting material

Page 16: Polymerase Chain Reaction Mrs. Stewart Medical Interventions.

Advantages of PCRUseful, non-invasive procedureSimplicity of the procedureSensitivity of the PCR

Disadvantages of PCRFalse positive results (cross

contamination). False negative results (e.g. rare of

circulating fetal cells).


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