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1.
We show that using low denaturation temperatures (80-88 degrees C) during ligation mediated PCR (LM PCR) of bacterial DNA leads to the amplification of limited sets of the less stable DNA fragments. A set of electrophoretic patterns of such fragments obtained at different denaturation temperatures forms the PCR melting profile (PCR MP). A single pattern obtained for a given temperature and a set of patterns arising after application of several denaturation temperatures (PCR MP) are very specific for the given bacterial genome and may be used for strain characterisation and differentiation. The method may also be used for amplification and isolation of the less stable DNA fragments in a genome.  相似文献   

2.
Rapid cycle DNA amplification: time and temperature optimization   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
Rapid temperature cycling with hot air allows rigorous optimization of the times and temperatures required for each stage of the polymerase chain reaction. A thermal cycler based on recirculating hot air was used for rapid temperature control of 10-microliters samples in thin glass capillary tubes with the sample temperature monitored by a miniature thermocouple probe. The temperatures and times of denaturation, annealing and elongation were individually optimized for the amplification of a 536-base pair beta-globin fragment from human genomic DNA. Optimal denaturation at 92 degrees-94 degrees C occurred in less than one second; yield decreased with denaturation times greater than 30 seconds. Annealing for one second or less at 54 degrees-56 degrees C gave the best product specificity and yield. Non-specific amplification was minimized with a rapid denaturation to annealing temperature transition (9 seconds) as compared to a longer transition (25 seconds). An elongation temperature of 75 degrees-79 degrees C gave the greatest yield and increased yields were obtained with longer elongation times. Product specificity was improved with rapid air cycling when compared to slower conventional heat block cycling. Rapid thermal control of the temperature-dependent reactions in DNA amplification can improve product specificity significantly while decreasing the required amplification time by an order of magnitude.  相似文献   

3.
The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique has become an indispensable method in molecular research. However, PCR-amplification of GC-rich templates is often hampered by the formation of secondary structures like hairpins and higher melting temperatures. We present a novel method termed 'Slowdown PCR', which allows the successful PCR-amplification of extremely GC-rich (>83%) DNA targets. The protocol relies on the addition of 7-deaza-2'-deoxyguanosine, a dGTP analog to the PCR mixture and a novel standardized cycling protocol with varying temperatures. The latter consists of a generally lowered ramp rate of 2.5 degrees C s(-1) and a low cooling rate of 1.5 degrees C s(-1) for reaching an annealing temperature and is run for 48 cycles. We established this protocol as a versatile method not only for amplification of extremely GC-rich regions, but also for routine DNA diagnostics and pharmacogenetics for templates with different annealing temperatures. The protocol takes 5 h to complete.  相似文献   

4.
Five thermal factors, including initial denaturation temperature, cycling denaturation temperature, annealing temperature, extension temperature and the temperature at which the intensity of the fluorescent signal is read, were evaluated for their effects on the detection of Vibrio vulnificus via real-time PCR. Fluorescent signal detection after extension was set between the Tm value of the primer-dimers (79 degrees C) and that of the PCR target amplicons (84 degrees C). This effectively eliminated the overestimation of the yield of PCR amplicons due to the presence of primer-dimers which otherwise led to erroneously lower Ct values (1.91+/-0.22 cycles lower). The annealing and extension steps were combined to convert a three-step PCR to a two-step PCR. This consisted of initial denaturation at 95 degrees C for 3 min, cycling denaturation at 94 degrees C for 15 s and a combined annealing and extension step at 60 degrees C for 5 s in each PCR cycle. One genomic target per real-time PCR reaction was detected with the simplified two-step PCR.  相似文献   

5.
Isolated-probe PCR (IP-PCR) is a method that combines asymmetric PCR, unlabeled probes, and high-resolution DNA melting while maintaining a closed tube system. A double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) dye LCGreen I was used to detect the unlabeled probes. LCGreen I is also used to detect the 277-base pair PCR product peak as an internal amplification control. To accomplish this, IP-PCR separates the asymmetric PCR amplification step and the detection step of the unlabeled probes. This prevents the probes from interfering with the amplification of the DNA target. The samples are then melted using a high-resolution DNA melting instrument: the HR-1. The closed tube system virtually eliminates PCR product contamination or sample carryover The target apolipoprotein E (APOE) was chosen to test the IP-PCR technique. APOE contains two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located 139 base pairs apart in a GC-rich region of the human genome. The results from this study show that the IP-PCR technique was able to determine the correct APOE genotype for each of the 101 samples. The IP-PCR technique should also be useful in detecting SNPs in other high-GC regions of the human genome.  相似文献   

6.
Hot-air temperature cycling of 1- to 10-microliters samples in glass capillary tubes can amplify DNA by the polymerase chain reaction in 15 min or less. A rapid temperature cycler of low thermal mass was constructed to change sample temperatures among denaturation, annealing, and elongation segments in a few seconds. After 30 cycles of 30 s each, a 536-bp beta-globin fragment of human genomic DNA was easily visualized with ethidium bromide on agarose gels. With rapid cycling, amplification yield depended on polymerase concentration. The time required for DNA amplification can be markedly reduced from prevailing protocols if appropriate equipment and sample containers are used for rapid heat transfer to the sample.  相似文献   

7.
In the attempt to explore complex bacterial communities of environmental samples, primers hybridizing to phylogenetically highly conserved regions of 16S rRNA genes are widely used, but differential amplification is a recognized problem. The biases associated with preferential amplification of multitemplate PCR were investigated using 'universal' bacteria-specific primers, focusing on the effect of primer mismatch, annealing temperature and PCR cycle number. The distortion of the template-to-product ratio was measured using predefined template mixtures and environmental samples by terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. When a 1 : 1 genomic DNA template mixture of two strains was used, primer mismatches inherent in the 63F primer presented a serious bias, showing preferential amplification of the template containing the perfectly matching sequence. The extent of the preferential amplification showed an almost exponential relation with increasing annealing temperature from 47 to 61 degrees C. No negative effect of the various annealing temperatures was observed with the 27F primer, with no mismatches with the target sequences. The number of PCR cycles had little influence on the template-to-product ratios. As a result of additional tests on environmental samples, the use of a low annealing temperature is recommended in order to significantly reduce preferential amplification while maintaining the specificity of PCR.  相似文献   

8.
聚合酶链式反应热流变化的DSC实验研究   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
在PCR每个循环中,目的基因在DNA聚合酶的催化作用下实现快速扩增,同时伴随着化学键的断裂和生成,而不同循环数的扩增效率不同,引起的热现象也不同。实验通过差示扫描量技术,以HBV为PCR扩增体系,分别研究了变性、退火和延伸阶段的热焓及其随循环数的变化,通过分析得出:变性阶段是放热过程,第17个循环放热量达到最大,退火和延伸阶段是吸热过程;3个阶段的热焓随循环数增加都发生明显的变化,其中变性阶段的热流变化最关键。  相似文献   

9.
We have developed a novel method for rapid and empirical mapping of the protein interaction domain using a unique and atypical PCR-based amplification and a conventional yeast two-hybrid system. The modified PCR, designated as PASA-PCR, enables preferential amplification of the shortest amplicon from a complex expression library. PASA-PCR consists of reiterative cycles of denaturation of template DNAs and extremely abbreviated annealing/extension of primers to prevent their complete extension in a single cycle, followed by conventional amplification cycles. In PASA-PCR, the shortest (ranging from 400 to 1000 bp) amplicon is amplified almost exclusively from templates of various amplicon sizes. In addition, the frequency of in vitro recombination can be increased using low cooling rates (<0.5 degrees C/s) between the denaturation and annealing/extension steps, which was helpful in generating precisely trimmed protein-coding regions. Identification of Spc19-binding region of Spc34, which is a component of yeast's spindle pole body, was achieved by a combination of the yeast two-hybrid system and PASA-PCR.  相似文献   

10.
We show that using low denaturation temperatures (80–88°C) during ligation mediated PCR (LM PCR) of bacterial DNA leads to the amplification of limited sets of the less stable DNA fragments. A set of electrophoretic patterns of such fragments obtained at different denaturation temperatures forms the PCR melting profile (PCR MP). A single pattern obtained for a given temperature and a set of patterns arising after application of several denaturation temperatures (PCR MP) are very specific for the given bacterial genome and may be used for strain characterisation and differentiation. The method may also be used for amplification and isolation of the less stable DNA fragments in a genome.  相似文献   

11.
The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is sensitive to mismatches between primer and template, and mismatches can lead to inefficient amplification of targeted regions of DNA template. In PCRs in which a degenerate primer pool is employed, each primer can behave differently. Therefore, inefficiencies due to different primer melting temperatures within a degenerate primer pool, in addition to mismatches between primer binding sites and primers, can lead to a distortion of the true relative abundance of targets in the original DNA pool. A theoretical analysis indicated that a combination of primer-template and primer-amplicon interactions during PCR cycles 3–12 is potentially responsible for this distortion. To test this hypothesis, we developed a novel amplification strategy, entitled “Polymerase-exonuclease (PEX) PCR”, in which primer-template interactions and primer-amplicon interactions are separated. The PEX PCR method substantially and significantly improved the evenness of recovery of sequences from a mock community of known composition, and allowed for amplification of templates with introduced mismatches near the 3’ end of the primer annealing sites. When the PEX PCR method was applied to genomic DNA extracted from complex environmental samples, a significant shift in the observed microbial community was detected. Furthermore, the PEX PCR method provides a mechanism to identify which primers in a primer pool are annealing to target gDNA. Primer utilization patterns revealed that at high annealing temperatures in the PEX PCR method, perfect match annealing predominates, while at lower annealing temperatures, primers with up to four mismatches with templates can contribute substantially to amplification. The PEX PCR method is simple to perform, is limited to PCR mixes and a single exonuclease step which can be performed without reaction cleanup, and is recommended for reactions in which degenerate primer pools are used or when mismatches between primers and template are possible.  相似文献   

12.
The ability to accurately monitor solution temperature is important for the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Robust amplification during PCR is contingent on the solution reaching denaturation and annealing temperatures. By correlating temperature to the fluorescence of a passive dye, noninvasive monitoring of solution temperatures is possible. The temperature sensitivity of 22 fluorescent dyes was assessed. Emission spectra were monitored and the change in fluorescence between 45 and 95 °C was quantified. Seven dyes decreased in intensity as the temperature increased, and 15 were variable depending on the excitation wavelength. Sulforhodamine B (monosodium salt) exhibited a fold change in fluorescence of 2.85. Faster PCR minimizes cycling times and improves turnaround time, throughput, and specificity. If temperature measurements are accurate, no holding period is required even at rapid speeds. A custom instrument using fluorescence-based temperature monitoring with dynamic feedback control for temperature cycling amplified a fragment surrounding rs917118 from genomic DNA in 3 min and 45 s using 35 cycles, allowing subsequent genotyping by high-resolution melting analysis. Gold-standard thermocouple readings and fluorescence-based temperature differences were 0.29 ± 0.17 and 0.96 ± 0.26 °C at annealing and denaturation, respectively. This new method for temperature cycling may allow faster speeds for PCR than currently considered possible.  相似文献   

13.
Our abilities to detect and enumerate pollutant-biodegrading microorganisms in the environment are rapidly advancing with the development of molecular genetic techniques. Techniques based on multiplex and real-time PCR amplification of aromatic oxygenase genes were developed to detect and quantify aromatic catabolic pathways, respectively. PCR primer sets were identified for the large subunits of aromatic oxygenases from alignments of known gene sequences and tested with genetically well-characterized strains. In all, primer sets which allowed amplification of naphthalene dioxygenase, biphenyl dioxygenase, toluene dioxygenase, xylene monooxygenase, phenol monooxygenase, and ring-hydroxylating toluene monooxygenase genes were identified. For each primer set, the length of the observed amplification product matched the length predicted from published sequences, and specificity was confirmed by hybridization. Primer sets were grouped according to the annealing temperature for multiplex PCR permitting simultaneous detection of various genotypes responsible for aromatic hydrocarbon biodegradation. Real-time PCR using SYBR green I was employed with the individual primer sets to determine the gene copy number. Optimum polymerization temperatures for real-time PCR were determined on the basis of the observed melting temperatures of the desired products. When a polymerization temperature of 4 to 5 degrees C below the melting temperature was used, background fluorescence signals were greatly reduced, allowing detection limits of 2 x 10(2) copies per reaction mixture. Improved in situ microbial characterization will provide more accurate assessment of pollutant biodegradation, enhance studies of the ecology of contaminated sites, and facilitate assessment of the impact of remediation technologies on indigenous microbial populations.  相似文献   

14.
PCR has been extensively used for amplification of DNA sequences. We conducted a study to obtain the best amplification conditions for cytochrome b (Cyt b), cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) and 12S rRNA (12S) gene fragments of Malayan gaur mtDNA. DNA from seven Malayan gaur samples were extracted for PCR amplification. Various trials and combinations were tested to determine the best conditions of PCR mixture and profile to obtain the best PCR products for sequencing purposes. Four selected target factors for enhancing PCR, annealing temperature, concentration of primer pairs, amount of Taq polymerase, and PCR cycle duration, were optimized by keeping the amount of DNA template (50 ng/μL) and concentration of PCR buffer (1X), MgCl(2) (2.5 mM) and dNTP mixture (200 μM each) constant. All genes were successfully amplified, giving the correct fragment lengths, as assigned for both forward and reverse primers. The optimal conditions were determined to be: 0.1 μM primers for Cyt b and COI, 0.3 μM primers for 12S, 1 U Taq polymerase for all genes, 30 s of both denaturation and annealing cycles for Cyt b, 1 min of both stages for 12S and COI and annealing temperature of 58.4 ° C for Cyt b, 56.1 ° C for 12S and 51.3 ° C for COI. PCR products obtained under these conditions produced excellent DNA sequences.  相似文献   

15.
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) was used to assay thermal transitions that might be responsible for cell death and other responses to hyperthermia or heat shock, such as induction of heat shock proteins (HSP), in whole Chinese hamster lung V79 cells. Seven distinct peaks, six of which are irreversible, with transition temperatures from 49.5 degrees C to 98.9 degrees C are detectable. These primarily represent protein denaturation with minor contributions from DNA and RNA melting. The onset temperature of denaturation, 38.7 degrees C, is shifted to higher temperatures by prior heat shock at 43 degrees and 45 degrees C, indicative of irreversible denaturation occurring at these temperatures. Thus, using DSC it is possible to demonstrate significant denaturation in a mammalian cell line at temperatures and times of exposure sufficient to induce hyperthermic damage and HSP synthesis. A model was developed based on the assumption that the rate limiting step of hyperthermic cell killing is the denaturation of a critical target. A transition temperature of 46.3 degrees C is predicted for the critical target in V79 cells. No distinct transition is detectable by DSC at this temperature, implying that the critical target comprises a small fraction of total denaturable material. The short chain alcohols methanol, ethanol, isopropanol, and t-butanol are known hyperthermic sensitizers and ethanol is an inducer of HSP synthesis. These compounds non-specifically lower the denaturation temperature of cellular protein. Glycerol, a hyperthermic protector, non-specifically raises the denaturation temperature for proteins denaturing below 60 degrees C. Thus, there is a correlation between the effect of these compounds on protein denaturation in vivo and their effect on cellular sensitivity to hyperthermia.  相似文献   

16.
It is unclear whether the thermal denaturation of staphylococcal nuclease is a two state, three state, or variable two state process. The thermal denaturation of wild-type staphylococcal nuclease was followed by tryptophan fluorescence and circular dichroism signal at 222 nm, forty-two and fourteen times, respectively. Analysis of this data using a simple two state model gave melting temperatures of 53.0+/-0.4 degrees C (fluorescence) and 52.7+/-0.6 degrees C (CD) and van't Hoff enthalpies of 82.4+/-2.6 kcal/mol and 88.6+/-4.2 kcal/mol. Ninety-seven mutants also had these parameters determined by both fluorescence and CD. The average difference between the melting temperatures was 1.05+/-0.75 degrees and the average difference between van't Hoff enthalpies was 1.6+/-4.8 kcal/mol. These very similar results for the two spectroscopic probes of structure are discussed in the context of the different models that have been proposed for nuclease denaturation. It is concluded, for most nuclease variants, that the errors introduced by a two state assumption are negligible and either virtually all helical structure is lost in any initial unfolding event or any intermediate must have low stability.  相似文献   

17.
We introduce quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) primers and multiplex end-point PCR primers modified by the addition of a single ortho-Twisted Intercalating Nucleic Acid (o-TINA) molecule at the 5'-end. In qPCR, the 5'-o-TINA modified primers allow for a qPCR efficiency of 100% at significantly stressed reaction conditions, increasing the robustness of qPCR assays compared to unmodified primers. In samples spiked with genomic DNA, 5'-o-TINA modified primers improve the robustness by increased sensitivity and specificity compared to unmodified DNA primers. In unspiked samples, replacement of unmodified DNA primers with 5'-o-TINA modified primers permits an increased qPCR stringency. Compared to unmodified DNA primers, this allows for a qPCR efficiency of 100% at lowered primer concentrations and at increased annealing temperatures with unaltered cross-reactivity for primers with single nucleobase mismatches. In a previously published octaplex end-point PCR targeting diarrheagenic Escherichia coli, application of 5'-o-TINA modified primers allows for a further reduction (>45% or approximately one hour) in overall PCR program length, while sustaining the amplification and analytical sensitivity for all targets in crude bacterial lysates. For all crude bacterial lysates, 5'-o-TINA modified primers permit a substantial increase in PCR stringency in terms of lower primer concentrations and higher annealing temperatures for all eight targets. Additionally, crude bacterial lysates spiked with human genomic DNA show lesser formation of non-target amplicons implying increased robustness. Thus, 5'-o-TINA modified primers are advantageous in PCR assays, where one or more primer pairs are required to perform at stressed reaction conditions.  相似文献   

18.
A condition for multiplex polymerase chain reactions (PCRs) of which outcomes sensitively indicate the actual annealing temperature of thermal cycling is reported. The multiplex reaction was designed to produce four different amplicons of 200, 300, 400, and 480 bp. However, the degree of amplification of each amplicon sensitively responds to a small change in the annealing temperature, by which one can predict the actual annealing temperature of thermal cycling. Deviations between the actual and the designated annealing temperatures as small as 0.5 degrees C were manifested by the banding patterns of the multiplex PCRs in simple agarose gel electrophoresis. For prediction of temperatures in a more objective manner, capillary electrophoresis was also applied to obtain numerical expressions of the relative intensities of the amplicons. By optimizing the multiplex PCR conditions, where concentrations of buffer, dNTPs, and primer pairs were major factors, satisfactory sensitivity and reproducibility of the band patterning were achieved. Blind tests demonstrated the accuracy of the prediction of actual annealing temperatures within +/-0.5 degrees C. The multiplex PCR approach will be further refined and tested for realization of an easily accessible alternative to a physical temperature measurement device in testing the performance of thermal cyclers for PCR.  相似文献   

19.
The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed to amplify a 1.0-kilobase (kb) probe-specific region of DNA from the herbicide-degrading bacterium Pseudomonas cepacia AC1100 in order to increase the sensitivity of detecting the organism by dot-blot analysis. The 1.0-kb region was an integral portion of a larger 1.3-kb repeat sequence which is present as 15 to 20 copies on the P. cepacia AC1100 genome. PCR was performed by melting the target DNA, annealing 24-base oligonucleotide primers to unique sequences flanking the 1.0-kb region, and performing extension reactions with DNA polymerase. After extension, the DNA was again melted, and the procedure was repeated for a total of 25 to 30 cycles. After amplification the reaction mixture was transferred to nylon filters and hybridized against radiolabeled 1.0-kb fragment probe DNA. Amplified target DNA was detectable in samples initially containing as little as 0.3 pg of target. The addition of 20 micrograms of nonspecific DNA isolated from sediment samples did not hinder amplification or detection of the target DNA. The detection of 0.3 pg of target DNA was at least a 10(3)-fold increase in the sensitivity of detecting gene sequences compared with dot-blot analysis of nonamplified samples. PCR performed after bacterial DNA was isolated from sediment samples permitted the detection of as few as 100 cells of P. cepacia AC1100 per 100 g of sediment sample against a background of 10(11) diverse nontarget organisms; that is, P. cepacia AC1100 was positively detected at a concentration of 1 cell per g of sediment. This represented a 10(3)-fold increase in sensitivity compared with nonamplified samples.  相似文献   

20.
The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed to amplify a 1.0-kilobase (kb) probe-specific region of DNA from the herbicide-degrading bacterium Pseudomonas cepacia AC1100 in order to increase the sensitivity of detecting the organism by dot-blot analysis. The 1.0-kb region was an integral portion of a larger 1.3-kb repeat sequence which is present as 15 to 20 copies on the P. cepacia AC1100 genome. PCR was performed by melting the target DNA, annealing 24-base oligonucleotide primers to unique sequences flanking the 1.0-kb region, and performing extension reactions with DNA polymerase. After extension, the DNA was again melted, and the procedure was repeated for a total of 25 to 30 cycles. After amplification the reaction mixture was transferred to nylon filters and hybridized against radiolabeled 1.0-kb fragment probe DNA. Amplified target DNA was detectable in samples initially containing as little as 0.3 pg of target. The addition of 20 micrograms of nonspecific DNA isolated from sediment samples did not hinder amplification or detection of the target DNA. The detection of 0.3 pg of target DNA was at least a 10(3)-fold increase in the sensitivity of detecting gene sequences compared with dot-blot analysis of nonamplified samples. PCR performed after bacterial DNA was isolated from sediment samples permitted the detection of as few as 100 cells of P. cepacia AC1100 per 100 g of sediment sample against a background of 10(11) diverse nontarget organisms; that is, P. cepacia AC1100 was positively detected at a concentration of 1 cell per g of sediment. This represented a 10(3)-fold increase in sensitivity compared with nonamplified samples.  相似文献   

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