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  • (English captions by Andrea Matsumoto, University of Michigan.)

  • The polymerase chain reaction or PCR can target and amplify any specific nucleic acid from

  • complex biological samples.

  • The procedure can be used for diagnosis to determine whether a clinical sample contains

  • a nuclear sequence that is known to occur only in a specific pathogen.

  • Or the laboratory scientists may use PCR to amplify and color large quantities of a specific

  • gene for research.

  • To preform PCR you must already know the sequence of the nucleic acid you wish to amplify.

  • Then you define the boundaries of the target sequence by identifying short sequences at

  • each end on opposite strands.

  • Here, the boundaries of the target sequence are indicated by violet and green highlighting.

  • If you move from these sequence in the five prime to three prime direction, the direction

  • of normal DNA synthesis, the violet highlighting extends along one strand and the green highlighting

  • extends along the complementary strand.

  • It is difficult to show how PCR works using this double helix representation of DNA so

  • the diagram with be converted to more easily understood ladder image of the DNA.

  • In addition to the clinical sample, the PCR reaction requires three ingredients.

  • First, there must be a massive supply of each of the four nucleotides.

  • Second, the user must add a large supply of small synthetic primers that are designed

  • to hybridize to the bonding sequence of either end of the targeted DNA.

  • The primers are the ingredients that make the reaction specific since only DNA that

  • lies between these two primers will be synthesized in the PCR reaction.

  • Third, the reaction requires a DNA polymerase enzyme.

  • For PCR the polymerase is actually from a bacteria that normally grows in the sea around

  • hot geothermal vents on the ocean floor.

  • The bacterium is called Thermus Aquaticus and the polymerase is called Taq polymerase

  • for short.

  • This exotic enzyme is used because it is not inactivated by the high temperatures generated

  • in the PCR reaction.

  • All these elements are mixed together in appropriate proportions and placed in an instrument called

  • a thermocycler.

  • This instrument can be programed to change the temperature of the mixture through a series

  • of repetitive cycles.

  • The temperature of the reaction in this demonstration is presented in the lower right panel.

  • In the first round of PCR the temperature is raised to a point at which the DNA is melted

  • and the complementary strands separate from one another.

  • The temperature is then lowered to a level at which the complementary strands can re-associate.

  • However, since the primers are present in the mixture at huge numbers, they are most

  • likely to bind at the complementary sites when the strands re-associate.

  • As the temperature is lowered further, the polymerase finds the free prime ends of the

  • primers and the enzyme begins to add nucleotides to the end of the primer using the complementary

  • strand as a template.

  • The same process occurs when DNA replicates in normal cell division.

  • At the end of round one of PCR there will be two copies of the target sequence for every

  • one that was present in the clinical sample.

  • You can keep track of the amplification in the panel that will appear on the lower left.

  • The same process is repeated in the second round of PCR.

  • The theromcycler dramatically heats the sample to separate the complementary strands of DNA,

  • including those that have just been synthesized.

  • The temperature is lowered to allow primers to bind at their specific sites and to prime

  • synthesis of complementary strands by taq polymerase when the temperature is lowered

  • again.

  • In the third round the same cycling of the reaction temperature occurs with melting of

  • the strands, binding of primers when the temperature is lowered, and new strand synthesis when

  • the strands are primed for DNA polymerase to begin adding nucleotides.

  • At the end of round three there are now eight double strand copies of the target sequence

  • where there was originally only one.

  • The enlarging frame from the lower left will now show what happens with successive cycles

  • of PCR.

  • With each cycle the number of copies of the target sequence doubles so there will be sixteen

  • copies after four cycles, thirty-two copies after five cycles, and sixty-four copies after

  • six cycles.

  • By the time the thermocycler has completed forty cycles the primers and nucleotides will

  • likely be exhausted but there will theoretically be ten to the twelfth (10 ^ 12) copies.

  • The target sequence will have been amplified a trillion times.

  • This level of amplification produces enough of the specific DNA that it can now be visualized

  • by gel electrophoresis.

  • The large smear of DNA at the top of the gel represents the complex DNA that was present

  • in the clinical sample.

  • However, a new smaller band appears in samples taken from the later cycles of PCR.

  • For diagnostic laboratory purposes the amplified DNA can be detected and quantified by more

  • efficient and simpler methods than gel electrophoresis.

  • One of these methods is discussed in an accompanying program.

  • Subtitles by the Amara.org community

(English captions by Andrea Matsumoto, University of Michigan.)

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