REVERSE TRANSCRIPTION POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION – MECHANISM AND LIMITATIONS

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In 1980s, Kary Mullis developed a revolutionary method called Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR). PCR relies on the ability to use DNA polymerase to synthesize new DNA strands that are complementary to the provided template strand. Since DNA polymerase can only add nucleotides to the pre-existing 3'OH groups, primers are needed to add the first nucleotide. This requirement makes it possible to map specific regions of the template sequence that researchers want to amplify. The specific sequence will accumulate billions of copies (amplicons), at the end of the PCR reaction.

DNA sample that contains the target sequence is called DNA template. In order to separate the strands from each other at the beginning of the reaction, a high temperature is applied to the original double-stranded DNA molecule.

DNA Polymerase is an enzyme that synthesizes a new strand of DNA complementary to the target sequence. Taq DNA polymerase (from Thermis Aquaticus), and PfuDNA polymerase (from Pyrococcus furiosus) are the first and the most commonly used enzymes due to their higher fidelity in copying DNA. There are two functions that make them suitable for PCR even though these enzymes are slightly different. The reasons include: 1) they can use DNA templates and primers to generate new DNA strands, and 2) they are heat resistant.

Primer is a small single-stranded DNA fragment that is complementary to the target sequence. The polymerase synthesizes new DNA from the ends of the primers.

Nucleotides (dNTP or deoxynucleotide triphosphate) are a single unit of A, T, G and C bases. They are basically the "building blocks" of the new DNA chain.

RT-PCR (Reverse Transcription PCR) is a PCR that first uses reverse transcriptase to convert a sample of RNA into cDNA. Most PCR methods are based on thermal cycling. In especially DNA fusion and enzyme-driven DNA replication, the thermal cycling expose reagents to repeated cycles of heating and cooling to allow for different temperature-dependent reactions. PCR uses two main reagents: primers (they are short pieces of single-stranded DNA, called oligonucleotides, which are sequences complementary to the target DNA region) and DNA polymerase. In the first step of PCR, the two strands of the DNA double helix are physically separated at high temperature in a process called nucleic acid denaturation. The second step is to lower the temperature and combine the primers with complementary DNA sequences. The two strands of DNA are then converted into DNA polymerase templates and a new strand of DNA is assembled from free nucleotides (a component of DNA) enzymatically. In order to start a chain reaction, the generated DNA itself is used as a replication template to start the chain reaction as PCR progresses, in which the original DNA template is exponentially amplified.

Applications

Applications of this technology include DNA cloning, cloning and manipulation, genetic sequencing of genetic mutations; DNA-based phylogenetic construction or genetic function analysis; diagnosis and monitoring of genetic diseases; ancient DNA amplification; fingerprints for DNA analysis Analysis (eg; forensic and paternity testing); detection of pathogens in nucleic acid tests to diagnose infectious diseases.