pcr: polymerase chain reaction basics & miniaturization biomems, 2010

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PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

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Page 1: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction

Basics & MiniaturizationBIOMEMS, 2010

Page 2: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction

Page 3: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

Nucleic Acids: DNA/RNA Polymers of Nucleotides

Deoxyribonucleic acid(DNA) Ribonucleic acid(RNA) 4 types of Nucleotides in DNA

Adenosine (A) Guanine (G) Cytosine (C) Thymine (T)

Page 4: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

DNA StructureSingle stranded DNA

Page 5: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

DNA StructureSingle stranded DNA will form double stranded DNA only with it’s complement

G-C

T-A

Hydrogen Bonding holds strands together

Page 6: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

DNA StructureDouble stranded DNA forms a double helix structure.

Page 7: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

DNA in Cells Humans have 46 chromosomes

Choromosomes (30,000 genes)

Gene- codes for a protein

SS DNA

Loci –small section of a gene

Nucleotide

Page 8: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

DNA/RNA analysis

Human Genomic DNA Mutations(SNP), Deletions, Identification(STR)

Organism Detection Pathogens (virus, bacteria)

RNA Gene expression

Page 9: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

DNA Assay: SNP What is a SNP Assay?

Three Steps: DNA purification

Amplification

Detection

Page 10: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

Example: Solid Phase Microspotting

Specific hybridization based assay

Basis of DNA microarrays Method:

Page 11: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

Example: Real-time PCR

Specific hybridization based assay

Fastest Assay Method Method/Limitations

Page 12: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

PCR is an exponential processes

y=ex  

e=2.71828281828

What is special about this number?

How PCR Works

Page 13: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

 

step 1 - Denaturation (optimal temperature is 94°C)By heating the DNA, the double strand melts and open to single stranded DNA.

How PCR Works

Page 14: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

 

step 2 - Annealing (optimal temperature is 60°C) The single-stranded primers bind to their complementary single-stranded bases on the denaturated DNA.

How PCR Works

Page 15: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

 

step 3 - Extension 72°C is the ideal temperature for the Taq polymerase to attach and start copying the template. The result is two new helixes in place of the first.

How PCR Works

Page 16: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

                                                                                                                                                          

                                                                                                      

By applying several times this cycle, the quantity of DNA obtained is quickly enough to perform any analysis. Starting with one DNA molecule after just 20 cycles there will be a million copies and after 30 cycles there will be a billion copies.

Page 17: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

Taq polymerase

The taq-polymerase needs ca. 1 min to synthesise 1 kbp. So the synthesis time depends on the length of your product

Thermus aquaticus

Page 18: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

Thermus aquaticus

The bacterium Thermus aquaticus was first discovered in several springs in the Great Fountain area of the Lower Geyser Basin at Yellowstone National Park

Page 19: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

How Real-Time PCR Works

diagram taken from TaqMan Gold RT-PCR kit protocol (PE Applied Biosystems)

Page 20: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

Real-Time PCR Data

Page 21: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

Standard PCR Thermocyclers

Thermal Uniformity: ±0.5°C within 30 seconds of arrival at 60°C

Ramping Speed: 60: up to 1°C/second, 96: up to 1.4°C/second, 96AgV: up to 2.5°C/second, 16MS: up to 0.5°C/second

PTC-100®Peltier Thermal CyclerMJ Research

Page 22: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

Fast PCR

Heat block cyclers can take hours to do 30- three temperature cycles. This slow rate leads to long lines for the machine and sign up sheets that force you to start your reactions at all hours. The RapidCycler™ can complete a 30 cycle reaction in less than 10 minutes. Finally, a machine that can keep up with the speed of the biochemistry. No more waiting in line. You can throw away those sign up sheets.

Idaho Technologies

Page 23: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

Fast PCR

The “Core” of Cepheid’s Amplification SystemsReal Time Thermal Cycling

   16 independently programmable reaction sites

   Faster and more sensitive than reference systems

   4-color real time optical detection in each site

   1-6 processing blocks

Page 24: PCR: Polymerase Chain Reaction Basics & Miniaturization BIOMEMS, 2010

Miniaturization of PCR ST Lab-On-Chip