What Is PCR?: Part 1 - Sample Preparation
What Is PCR?: Part 1 - Sample Preparation
What Is PCR?: Part 1 - Sample Preparation
PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) is a technique that allows many copies of DNA to be made. It is one of the cornerstones of the current revolution in molecular genetics. Before the advent of PCR, making sufficient copies of DNA for sequencing was a tedious process. Now, PCR makes obtaining copies of DNA from a small original sample routine, with far-reaching consequences. For example, it made DNA finger-printing widely available, for use not only in forensic science for identifying potential suspects but also for use by behavioral biologists to trace paternities in a population of wild birds to monitor what type of behavior leads to success in mating. In normal cells, the double-stranded DNA is unzipped with an enzyme to start the replication process. In PCR, single-stranded DNA is made by heating a chromosome fragment to 95C. It is then cooled so that the primers anneal to the original DNA strands and DNA polymerase can bind and copy each strand. With repeated heating and cooling, millions and even billions of copies of DNA can be made in a few hours. An interesting twist was the discovery of chemoautotrophic bacteria that live in the hydrothermal vents in the deep ocean floor. These creatures live in the vents where temperatures exceed 100C; consequently, their DNA polymerases remain functional at such temperatures that would have denatured an ordinary creature's DNA polymerases. DNA polymerases isolated from these bacteria have made it possible to develop automatic thermocycler machines without the need to add new polymerases each cycle. To obtain only the desired portion of the DNA, this lab uses oligonucleotide primers that specifically bind to regions flanking the 16S rRNA gene.
Step 2: Run PCR Once the reaction tubes are loaded onto the thermocycler (the "PCR machine"), the automatic process of DNA replication starts (refer to the animation). The machine used in this lab has readouts that describe what is happening: (from left to right: temperature, time remaining, cycle number, melt, anneal, and extend) The temperature control is set up as follows: Initial incubation step - 95C for 10 minutes 30 cycles of the following sequence of steps: o o o Melt - 95C 30 seconds Anneal - 60C 30 seconds Extend - 72C 45 seconds
Final extension Step - 72C 10 minutes Final step - 4C store at this temperature During each cycle, the first step (melt) is to separate the two DNA chains in the double helix by heating the vial containing the PCR reaction mixture to 95C for 30 seconds. The primers cannot bind to the DNA strands at such a high temperature, so the vial is cooled to 60C. At this temperature, the primers bind (anneal) to the singlestranded DNA. (The reason the two separated strands of DNA do not reanneal is that there is a large excess of primers in the solution; therefore, it's more likely for the DNA strands to bind to the primers instead of to each other.) The final step (Extend) is to allow the DNA polymerase to extend the copy DNA strand by raising the temperature to 70C for 45 seconds. The three stepsthe separation of the strands, annealing the primer to the template, and the synthesis of new strandstake less than two minutes. Each is carried out in the same vial. At the end of a cycle, each piece of DNA in the vial has been duplicated. The cycle can be repeated 30 or more times, and each newly synthesized DNA piece acts as a new template. After 30 cycles, 1million copies of the initial DNA piece can be produced.
In this lab, we use a set of 12 primers; six for each strand of the double-stranded DNA. It is theoretically possible to use a single primer in PCR cycle sequencing, but it is not feasible for long sequences. With multiple primers, short, overlapping stretches of DNA are sequenced to obtain the complete sequence. In addition, it is not absolutely necessary to sequence both strands, although sequencing both strands generates redundant data, thereby reducing error. The exact number and location of primers used in a reaction depend on the availability of suitable primers. The primers used here are available from a commercial source and bind to conserved regions of the 16S rDNA gene. They should thus be able to bind to the sequence regardless of the bacterial source. Each green and blue tube contains a "sequencing brew" consisting of buffers, primers (a different one in each tube), DNA polymerases, nucleotides, and fluorescence-tagged terminators in suitable proportions. The PCR product from the previous step is added to each tube and another PCR is run. This time the aim is not to produce identical copies of DNA but many copies of variable length. The animation illustrates what is happening in one tube containing the primer 651R. Each DNA strand binds the primer at one end and will have a fluorescencetagged terminator at the other end.