Connecting people. Sharing Information.
Part 1:
what is PCR?
who invented PCR?
How does PCR works?
PCR chemical ingredients
PCR Diagram
Steps:
1 – Denaturation
2- Annealing
3-Extension
Part 2:
Types of PCR
Quantitative
Real time
Reverse transcription
Part 3:
Multiplex
Nested
High -fidelity
fast
heart start
GC rich
Long range
AP PCR
Part 4:
application of PCR
clinical diagnosis, prenatal diagnosis, retro-viral, bacterial infection, cancer diagnosis, sex determination embryos and forensic medicine
Standard ingredients in the mixture are:
·the DNA segment of interest
·specific primers
·heat-resistant DNA polymerase enzyme
·the four different types of DNA nucleotides
·the salts needed to create a suitable environment for the enzyme to act.
Quantitative PCR (qPCR), also called real-time PCR or quantitative real-time PCR, is a PCR-based technique that couples amplification of a target DNA sequence with quantification of the concentration of that DNA species in the reaction.
Real–time PCR is the technique of collecting data throughout the PCR process as it occurs, thus combining amplification and detection into a single step. This is achieved using a variety of different fluorescent chemistries that correlate PCR product concentration to fluorescence intensity
Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction is a laboratory technique combining reverse transcription of RNA into DNA and amplification of specific DNA targets using polymerase chain reaction. It is primarily used to MEA
sure the amount of a specific RNA.
Direct detection of microorganisms in patient specimens
Identification of microorganisms grown in culture
Detection of antimicrobial resistance
Investigation of strain relatedness of a pathogen of interest
Genetic fingerprinting (forensic application/paternity testing)
Detection of mutation ( investigation of genetic diseases)
you can have maximum details in course video