PCR - Polymerase Chain Reaction
PCR - Polymerase Chain Reaction
PCR - Polymerase Chain Reaction
(PCR)
Nandana N Kumara
Wayamba University of Sri Lanka
DNA
DNA is a nucleic acid that is composed of two
complementary nucleotide building block
chains.
CCGAATGGGATGC
GGCTTACCCTACG
• Complementary strand
DNA Molecule
Adeni ne
Thymi ne
Guani ne
Cy tosi ne
What is the Polymerase
Chain Reaction?
• It’s a means of selectively amplifying a
particular segment of DNA.
• The segment may represent a small part of a
large and complex mixture of DNAs:
e.g. a specific exon of a human gene.
• It can be thought of as a molecular
photocopier.
How Powerful is PCR?
• PCR can amplify a usable amount of DNA
(visible by gel electrophoresis) in ~2 hours.
• The template DNA need not be highly
purified — ex: a boiled bacterial colony.
• The PCR product can be digested with
restriction enzymes, sequenced or cloned.
• PCR can amplify a single DNA molecule, e.g.
from a single sperm.
Gene Analysis Prior to PCR?
• Southern blotting (1975) permitted
rudimentary mapping of genes in unrelated
individuals (RFLPs, insertions & deletions).
• DNA sequencing (1978) required genes to
first be cloned into plasmid or λ vectors.
• Gene library construction and screening
could take many months and libraries had
to be made for each individual analyzed.
The Invention of PCR
• Invented by Kary Mullis in 1983.
• First published account appeared in 1985.
• Awarded Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1993.
Did He Really Invent PCR?
• The basic principle of replicating a piece of
DNA using two primers had already been
described by Gobind Khorana in 1971: –
Kleppe et al. (1971) J. Mol. Biol. 56, 341-346.
• Progress was limited by primer synthesis
and polymerase purification issues.
• Mullis properly exploited amplification.
The Basics of PCR Cycling
Each cycle comprise:
denaturation (95°C), - 30 sec.
annealing (55–60°C), - 30 sec.
extension (72°C), - time depends on product
size.
What’s in the Reaction mixture?
• Template DNA
• Reaction buffer (Tris, ammonium ions
(and/or potassium ions), magnesium ions,
bovine serum albumin)
• Nucleotides (dNTPs)
• Primers
• DNA polymerase (usually Taq)
PCR Primers
Primers range from 15 to 30 nucleotides, are
single-stranded, and are used for the
complementary building blocks of the target
sequence.
PCR Primers
• A primer for each target sequence on the
end of your DNA is needed.
• This allows both strands to be copied
simultaneously in both directions.
• DNA is copied from 3’ end to the 5’ end
PCR Primers
3’TTAACGGCCTTAA . . . TTTAAACCGGTT5’
AATTGCCGGAATT . . . . . . . . . .>
and
<. . . . . . . . . . AAATTTGGCCAA
5’TTAACGGCCTTAA . . . TTTAAACCGGTT3’
PCR Primers
The primers are added in excess so they will
bind to the target DNA instead of the two
strands binding back to each other.
PCR In Detail
• Denature, anneal, extend and repeat the
• cycle 30 to 35 times.
• How does the polymerase know to stop?
“when it reaches the other primer”