Encyclopedia of Experiments
Biological Techniques
このコンテンツを視聴するには、JoVE 購読が必要です。  サインイン又は無料トライアルを申し込む。
Encyclopedia of Experiments Biological Techniques
Microsphere Polymerase Chain Reaction to Amplify Single-Stranded DNA

Microsphere Polymerase Chain Reaction to Amplify Single-Stranded DNA

筆記録

Microsphere-PCR uses a micro-sized sphere coupled to oligonucleotides on their surface, which enables the preferential amplification of single-stranded DNA.

To begin microsphere-PCR, take a reaction mix containing template single-stranded DNA strands, forward primers with an additional nucleotide tag, thermostable DNA polymerase, dNTPs, and microspheres displaying single-stranded oligonucleotide probes. 

Place the tube in a thermocycler, and run at the defined conditions.

In the first cycle, at the annealing temperature, the template DNA binds to the probe on the microsphere's surface such that the template DNA functions as the sense strand. During extension, the polymerase extends the DNA, and the duplex remains attached to the microsphere. 

In the next cycle, during denaturation, the template DNA separates from the microsphere, leaving the probe strand bound to the surface — serving as a template for a new strand.

During annealing, the tagged primer binds to the antisense strand. Later, the polymerase extends it to synthesize the sense strand with the nucleotide tag.

Repeat the cycle several times to generate multiple copies of sense single-stranded DNA, which go into the solution, while the double-stranded contaminants remain attached.

Transfer the PCR products to a tube containing a loading buffer. Load the product and markers into different wells of the gel, and separate using agarose gel electrophoresis.

The template DNAs form a faint low-molecular-weight band, while an intense high-molecular-weight band confirms single-stranded DNA amplification.

関連ビデオ

Read Article