chapter 7 part 3 Flashcards
polymerase chaine reaction (PCR)
automated version of DNA replication that produces millions of copies of a short target DNA segment
is PCR carried out in small or large volumes
small (less than 100 ul)
PCR requirements
- double-stranded DNA template w/ target sequence
- 4 DNA nucleotides
- heat-stable DNA pol
- 2 dif single-stranded DNA primers
- buffer solution
Taq polymerase
Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase used for PCR
- lives in hot springs
PCR steps
- denaturation - reaction heat to 95 C to denature DNA into single strands
- primer annealing - temp reduced to 45-68 C to allow primers to hybridize to complementary sequences
- primer extension - temp raised to 72 C to allow Taq pol to synthesize DNA
realtime-PCR/qPCR
modification to traditional PCR
- use spectrophotometer in each well to measure DNA product production in real-time
- use detection methods
most common detection method for realtime-PCR
fluorescent dyes like SYBR Green
benefits of realtime PCR
- can be used to quantitate starting amount of template DNA present accurately
- reduces detection time and uses less concentrated DNA/RNA templates
- doesn’t require DNA electrophoresis to detect products after amplification
ddPCR
newest version of PCR
- creates 10s of 1000s of nanoliter-sized droplets, each containing all the components of a PCR reaction
- PCR performed in each droplet
- amount of dNA in each nano droplet read
- analyze results
benefits of ddPCR
- single sample generates 10s of 1000s of data points, increasing stat power and allowing for high levels of quantitation within a single sample
- highly quantitative and very sensitive
- unparalleled precision
Sanger sequencing development
Frederick Sanger in 1977
what is Sanger sequencing also known as
dideoxynucleotide DNA sequencing (dideoxy sequencing)
Sanger sequencing
uses DNA polymerase to replicate new DNA from single-stranded template
- 4 standard dNTP bases present in large amounts
- each reaction contains small amount of 1 dideoxynucleotide (ddNTP)
- separate reaction carried out for A, T, G, and C using corresponding small amount of one particular ddNTP
- reaction tubes produce series of partial DNA molecules
- all 4 reactions run side by side on DNA gel to determine complete sequence
- newer technologies use fluorescently laced ddNTPs and run all 4 in same lane
ddNTP
lacks 3’- OH group
- can’t be added onto (chain terminates)
- replication “poison”
what happens when a ddNTP is incorporated into the product DNA molecule
replication ceases
how is a DNA gel read
from bottom to top
automated DNA sequencing
- single reaction for each DNA sequence (all 4 ddNTPs included)
- each ddNTP labeled w/ unique fluorescent marker
- DNA synthesized, mixture of fragments produced and run on gel
- labels have dif wavelengths, laser light excites fluorescent tags
- wavelength read and recorded by computer
next generation DNA sequencing
- hundreds of thousands to millions of DNA fragments in parallel
- decrease in cost, increase in speed
- identifies sequence of DNA strand during synthesis rather than by chain termination method of dideoxy sequencing
third-generation sequencing and NGS differ from Sanger by:
- using PCR to amplify DNA to allow feasible sequencing of repetitive DNA
- massively parallel, millions of sequencing reads in each run