What happens during a polymerase chain reaction
During the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), a certain portion of DNA is
amplified many times.
The
essential ingredients for a successful PCR are:
1) DNA polymerase
enzyme. Usually isolated from
Thermus aquaticus, a
bacteria that can withstand high temperatures. Thus, the enzyme can endure temperatures up to 94°C without being
denatured, unlike most other enzymes.
2) Buffer and Magnesium Chloride. These solutions serve to
optimise the conditions in which the enzyme functions, as enzymes are very
sensitive to pH and salt concentrations.
3) Four basic
deoxynucleotides, also known as dNTPs. The four basic nucleotides are the
building blocks of DNA. In order to generate build copies of a
house, you need
bricks. These act like bricks to build the new copy of the DNA.
4) Primers. This are short pieces of DNA which act as
starter material from which the DNA polymerase will begin.
5)
DNA. This is the original copy of the DNA, also known as the
template.
6) A PCR
machine. A typical program on the PCR machine will read like this:
Stage 1
- 94°C for 2 minutes
Continue to Stage 2
Stage 2
- 94°C for 30 seconds
- 60°C for 15 seconds
- 72°C for 1 min 20 seconds
Repeat 30 times; then continue to stage 3
Stage 3
- 72°C for 6 minutes
End.
As you will notice 3
temperatures are used in PCR. These temperatures have their purposes:
-- 94°C is known as the
denaturing temperature. It causes the double-stranded DNA to separate from each other.
-- 60°C is known as the
annealing temperature. It allows the primers to anneal to the template.
-- 72°C is the
elongation temperature, enabling the polymerase to finish building the copy it is making.
The amplification occurs during Stage 2. Stage 1 is just to denature the DNA; Stage 3 allows for
complete elongation of all the PCR fragments.
What happens in a PCR machine during Stage 2
1) Denaturation occurs first.
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Double-stranded DNA at rest.
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The DNA strands separate from each other. This is denaturation.
2) Next, the primers anneal (
stick) to the DNA.
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Denatured DNA.
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------- {Upper Primer
------- {Lower
| | | Primer
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The primers anneal to the denatured DNA.
3) Then, elongation
occurs.
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Primer} -------
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-------P
The polymerase (P) attaches.
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-----------------P | |
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The polymerase "builds" the second strand of DNA using the "bricks" (|) present.
The "bricks" are the dNTPs.
After 1 round of amplification, 2
1 copies of the DNA fragment would be present. After 2 rounds, it would increase to 2
2=4 copies. After 30 cycles, 2
30 copies, i.e. 1073741824 copies would be present. This is the reason why PCR can be used even if very
few copies of the DNA is available. It is now a
common technique used in almost every biological laboratory.