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Ch 8.Immunohistoch / immunology
Ch 10.GC/MS, NMR and Proteomics
Molecular Biology / PCR / Variants of PCR / PCR Resource 2 -- from (Dr. Chen, Dept of Biochem. & Mol. Biology,
1) Add the following to a microfuge tube:
10 ul reaction buffer
1 ul 15 uM forward primer
1 ul 15 uM reverse primer
1 ul
template DNA
5 ul 2 mM dNTP
8 ul 25 mM MgCl2 or MgSO4 (volume variable)
water (to make up to 100 ul)
2) Place tube in a thermocycler.
Heat sample to 95C, then add 0.5 -1 ul of enzyme (Taq, Tli, Pfu etc.). Add a few drops of mineral oil.
3) Start the PCR cycles according
the following schemes:
a) denaturation - 94C, 30-90 sec.
b) annealing - 55C (or -5C Tm), 0.5-2 min.
c) extension - 72C, 1 min. (time
depends on length of PCR product and enzyme used)
repeat cycles 29 times
4) Add a final extension step of 5 min. to fill in any uncompleted
polymerisation. Then cooled down to 4- 25C.
Note:
Most of the parameters can be varied to optimise the PCR (more at Tavi's PCR guide):
a)Mg++ - one of the main variables - change the amount added if the PCR result is poor. Mg++ affects the annealing of the oligo to the
template DNA by stabilising the oligo-template interaction, it also stabilises the replication complex of polymerase with template-primer.
It can therefore also increases non-specific annealing and produced undesirable PCR products (gives multiple bands in gel). EDTA which
chelate Mg++ can change the Mg++ concentration.
b) Template DNA concentration - PCR is very powerful tool for DNA amplification therefore
very little DNA is needed. But to reduce the likelihood of error by Taq DNA polymerase, a higher DNA concentration can be used, though
too much template may increase the amount of contaminants and reduce efficiency.
c) Enzymes used - Taq DNA polymerase has a higher
error rate (no proof-reading 3' to 5' exonuclease activity) than Tli or Pfu. Use Tli, Pfu or other polymerases with good proof-reading
capability if high fidelity is needed. Taq, however, is less fussy than other polymerases and less likely to fail. It can be used
in combination with other enzymes to increase its fidelity. Taq also tends to add extra A's at the 3'end (extra A's are useful forTA cloning but needs to be removed if blunt end ligation is to be done). More enzymes can also be added to improve efficiency (sinceTaq may be damaged in repeated cycling) but may increase non-specific PCR products. Vent polymerase may degrade primer and therefore
not ideal for mutagenesis-by-PCR work.
d) dNTP - can use up to 1.5 mM dNTP. dNTP chelate Mg++, therefore amount of Mg++ used may need
to be changed. However excessive dNTP can increase the error rate and possibly inhibits Taq. Lowering the dNTP (10-50 uM) may therefore
also reduce error rate. Larger size PCR fragment need more dNTP.
e) primers - up to 3 uM of primers may be used, but high primer to
template ratio can results in non-specific amplification and primer-dimer formation (note: store primers in small aliquots).
f) Primer
design - check primer sequences to avoid primer-dimer formation. Add a GC-clamp at the 5' end if a restriction site is introduced
there. One or two G or C at the 3' end is fine but try to avoid having too many (it can result in non-specific PCR products). Perfect
complementarity of 18 bases or more is ideal. See Guide.
g) Thermal cycling - denaturation time can be increased if template GC content
is high. Higher annealing temperature may be needed for primers with high GC content or longer primers (calculate Tm). Using a gradient (if
your PCR machine permits it) is a useful way of determining the annealing temperature. Extension time should be extended for larger
PCR products; but reduced it whenever possible to limit damage to enzyme. Extension time is also affected by the enzymes used e.g
for Taq - assume 1000 base/min (also check suppliers' recommendations, actual rate is much higher). The number of cycle can be increased
if the number of template DNA is very low, and decreased if high amount of template DNA is used (higher template DNA is preferable
for PCR cloning - lower error rate in the PCR).
h) Additives -
i) PCR buffer
j) The PCR product may be purified using a number of commercially available products or by gel-purificationif the template needed to be removed. It can also be sequenced.
k) Trouble shooting see Tavi's page, MycoSite, Alkami Biosystems,Promega and Sigma.
l) PCR methods
For more information, protocols and links, go to PCR
jump station, Alkami Biosystem, Fermentas, Promega, and Sigma, See also PCR primer, PCR notes and PCR manual at Roche and Qiagen.
Other PCR links - PCR lectures, radio-labelled probes, Thermocycler suppliers
Standard PCR protocols
From Molecular Biology
Techniques Manual, from the web site of the University of Cape Town, South Africa.
http://web.uct.ac.za/microbiology/pcr...
T-DNA Generated Enhancer Traps in Arabidopsis
Application of inverse PCR, partial genomic libraries and TAIL-PCR in cloning flanking,
at the Department of Biological Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH.
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~tjack/
Tavi's PCR
protocols
A page describing the main parameters and trouble-shooting in PCR. The page is somewhat dated (updated 1997) but still useful.
http://info.med.yale.edu/genetics/war...
Technical manual of PCR
Intended for specialists planning PCR procedures in their laboratories. From the
http://web.uct.ac.za/microbiology/pcr...
The Polymerase Chain Reaction
A popular description of the way it works,
its importance in different connections, legal aspects. Authored by TM Powledge at the Federation of the American Societies of Experimental
Biology.
http://www.faseb.org/opar/bloodsupply...
The web guide of PCR
List of links and forum on the subject and related
methodology. Set up and maintained by SJ Krivokapich, National University of Misiones, Argentina.
http://www.pcrlinks.com/
Thermostable DNA Polymerases
Discussion of their origin and briefly their properties. From the web site of
http://arbl.cvmbs.colostate.edu/hbook...
Wayward PCR primers
Article by PN Hengen from TIBS 1995 on the loss of activity of PCR primers with time.
http://www-lecb.ncifcrf.gov/~pnh/pape...
What the Heck is PCR?
Popular description of the PCR technique by John C Brown,
http://people.ku.edu/~jbrown/pcr.html
Which DNA Marker for Which Purpose?
Compendia of the Research Project "Development, optimisation and validation of molecular tools
for assessment of biodiversity in forest trees", European Union DGXII Biotechnology FW IV Research Programme. From the web site of
the University Library, Gttingen.
http://webdoc.sub.gwdg.de/ebook/y/199...
quot; Technique for Enhancing Detection of
Small Deletions in Mutant Libraries
This method works because the poison allows the formation of deletion products but titers out
full-sized products. From the Biotechnology Laboratory,
http://ko.cigenomics.bc.ca/poison1.html