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PCR workshop (Suitable for Edvotek kits 330, 371, 372)
Edvotek Europe
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What are we doing today? Introduction Set up PCR reaction Load gels
Electrophoresis Analyse results
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Health & safety No toxic chemicals
Safe solutions and reagents used in place of research materials
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The Polymerase Chain Reaction
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What does PCR do? PCR makes millions of copies of DNA Uses PCR machine
A DNA photocopier!
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Cell division DNA polymerase duplicates DNA during cell division
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DNA polymerase in action!
Stars show DNA polymerase bound to DNA
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Who invented PCR? “EUREKA!!! I stopped the car. Somehow, I thought, it had to be an illusion. Otherwise it would change DNA chemistry forever. Otherwise it would make me famous. It was too easy. Someone else would have done it and surely I would have heard of it. We would be doing it all the time.” Kary Mullis - inventor of PCR, Nobel Prize 1993
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Mullis’s Nobel prize speech is well worth reading
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What is in a PCR reaction
Use 5μl from tube labelled “Template DNA” Use 20μl from tube labelled “primers” The PCR bead Template DNA The starting material in a PCR reaction. Primers are two short pieces of DNA (0-15 bases long) that determine the region of DNA to be copied. Nucleotides A’s, T’s, G’s and C’s to make up the new DNA strands Taq DNA polymerase The enzyme that makes new DNA strands MgCl2 Required for Taq DNA polymerase to function
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How does PCR work? Mix the following: Template DNA Nucleotides Primers
Taq DNA polymerase MgCl2
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Cycle through 3 temperatures
Denature: unzips DNA Anneal: primers bind to complementary areas of target DNA Extend: Taq DNA polymerase fills in the blanks!
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Lots of DNA produced Successive cycles double amount of DNA
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Taq DNA polymerase Thermus aquaticus bacteria that lives at high temperature DNA polymerase crucial to automate PCR
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Uses of PCR
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Forensics! ... Like TV shows...
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Paternity testing
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Genetic testing
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Types of PCR kit DNA template provided (intro level)
Cat no 371 DNA fingerprinting Cat no 372 Quick PCR DNA template must be extracted (more advanced) Cat no 333 or 334 chromosome kit
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The experiment
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Quick PCR set up Carefully transfer PCR bead to 0.2ml tube & label
Add 5ul template DNA Add 20ul primer mix Place in PCR machine
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Quick PCR cycles Initial denaturation 94°C for 180 seconds
Then 20 cycles of: 94°C for 30 seconds 71°C for 15 seconds (annealing) 71°C for 15 seconds (extension) Annealing & extension are same temperature
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EdvoCycler PCR machine Easy to use Select cat no Programmable
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Choose programme
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Press to select
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Lid will heat up
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Then cycles start
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Then cycles start Programme selected = Cat no of kit
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Then cycles start Number of cycles to go
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Then cycles start Number of cycles completed
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Then cycles start Temperature for each step
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Then cycles start Time in seconds for each step
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DNA electrophoresis
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Gel casting
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Running buffer TAE buffer 20ml 50x buffer to 1 litre with water
Distilled water ideal but tap ok Can be reused a few times Store unused for future use ok
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Agarose 0.8% Agarose 3g in 375 ml dilute buffer
Melt in microwave/autoclave Pour when hand hot
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Agarose Store gels for 1-2 weeks in fridge wrapped in cling film or plastic bag Keep any left over gels and remelt next time
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Remove comb & ends
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Fixed volume minipipette
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Adjustable micropipette
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Dry loading You can load gel dry instead of through buffer!
Otherwise load “wet” through buffer Either way, remember Do not puncture bottom of well Change tips between each sample
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HexaGel and EVT 300 power supply
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Quick PCR kit gel Loading
After PCR reaction add 5l loading dye Load 40 l of each sample into the wells A M B LG1 C LG2 D E F
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Run gels Put on lid and attach to power supply
Run for 30 minutes at 150 volts Or 75 volts for minutes Check for bubbles at electrode Run until tracking dye halfway across gel
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After gel run stain the gel
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Stain PCR gel MetBlue card blue side down 5 mins Weigh with gel tray
Destain in warm water mins Leave overnight in fridge for best result Keep long term in bag in fridge
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Stain Gel
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Gel storage Can store gels in fridge before staining over weeknight or weekend Cannot store dye kits overnight before viewing as diffuse!
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Quick PCR result
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Thank you PCR experiments can be carried out easily
Fun and relevant to wider world Promote understanding
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