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Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)

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    (English captions by Andrea Matsumoto, University of Michigan.)
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    This program shows how a specific nucleic
    acid in a clinical sample can be detected
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    and quantified using PCR.
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    This is accomplished by detecting the accumulation
    of the amplified PCR products as they are
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    generated in the reaction.
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    And so the process is called real-time,
    or RTPCR.
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    To understand how amplified PCR products,
    also called amplicons, are detected in real-time,
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    let's first review the events that occur
    during a normal cycle of the PCR reaction.
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    Recall that the first step in any PCR cycle
    is to raise the reaction temperature and melt
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    double-stranded DNA.
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    Then, when the temperature is lowered, the
    specific primers bind to the sequences at
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    each end of the target DNA.
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    The intervening DNA can then be synthesized
    by polymerase reaction in opposite directions.
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    Other results, you produce two double-strand
    copies of the target DNA, where you started
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    with only one.
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    If you have any confusion about this basic
    process, it might be a good idea to review
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    the program on basic PCR once again.
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    To detect the generation of new amplicons
    in real-time, the PCR reaction requires an
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    additional ingredient -a single-stranded DNA
    probe, designed to hybridize to the part of
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    the DNA sequence synthesized between the two
    primers.
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    However, unlike the primers, this probe is
    more defined in a special way. One of its
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    nucleotides is labeled with a fluorescent
    molecule and another nucleotide is labeled
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    with a fluorescence quencher molecule.
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    The quencher rapidly absorbs any light energy
    emitted by the fluorescent molecule, as long
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    as it remains in close proximity.
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    Now, let's look at what happens when this
    additional ingredient is present during a
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    single cycle of PCR.
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    Other primers bind to the separate strands
    of DNA.
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    The probe also finds its complimentary sites
    between them.
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    The enzyme synthesizes new DNA from the ends
    of the primers also have a second activity:
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    an exonucleus activity.
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    So when it encounters double-stranded DNA
    in its path, it will disassemble the strand
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    that is in its way, and replace all of the
    nucleotides.
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    As polymerase pass through the probe, note
    that the nucleotide bearing the fluorescent
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    marker and the one bearing the quencher are
    separated from one another.
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    In the absence of a nearby quencher, the fluorescent
    molecule can now emit detectable light when
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    stimulated.
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    Each time another amplicon is produced, another
    fluorescent marker is released from its neighboring
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    quencher.
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    Therefore, just as the number of amplicons
    doubles in each PCR cycle, the amount of emitted
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    fluorescent energy also doubles.
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    This light generation can be monitored during
    the PCR reaction thermocycler that is equipped
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    with a fluorometer.
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    So, if you begin with a clinical sample that
    had only one copy of the target DNA, it could
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    take 40 or more cycles before the amplicons
    are detected by a fluorometer in a specialized
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    thermocycler.
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    However, if the original sample contained
    32 times more copies of the target DNA, then
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    the fluorometric detection would occur after
    5 fewer rounds of PCR.
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    And if there were 1,024 more target DNA sequences
    in the original sample, then the fluorescent
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    signal would be detected 10 rounds earlier.
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    So, the amount of specific DNA in the clinical
    sample is determined by a reference to the
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    round of PCR in which the amount of fluorescence
    first crosses the threshold of detection.
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    RTPCR is most commonly used to quantify
    the burden of viruses in the blood of patients
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    with HIV, Hepatitis B, and other viruses.
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    But HIV is an RNA virus; it has no DNA, and
    the RNA that it possesses is single stranded.
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    So, how can this method work?
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    The answer is that RNA, from an RNA virus,
    can be quantified after it has been copied
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    and converted to double-stranded DNA.
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    This animation shows how this is accomplished.
    First, the viral RNA is released from the
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    virion.
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    Then, a complimentary DNA strand is synthesized
    from the viral RNA using purified reverse
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    transcriptase, just as it does in natural
    replication.
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    In some protocols, a specialized RNAse enzyme
    is then added to make the RNA and allow it
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    to be degraded.
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    Whether or not this is part of the procedure,
    the next key step occurs when a DNA polymerase
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    and a primer generate a complimentary DNA
    strand, just as in the PCR reaction.
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    At the end of this reaction, a single strand
    of viral RNA has been converted to a double-stranded
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    DNA that has the same sequence of nucleotide
    bases.
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    The qualitative PCR reaction can proceed as
    described previously.
Title:
Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
Description:

This short animation introduces the real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) procedure. Captions are available in multiple languages. This resource was developed by Yaw Adu-Sarkodie of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology and Cary Engleberg of the University of Michigan. It is part of a larger learning module about laboratory methods for clinical microbiology. The full learning module, editable animation, and video transcript are available at http://open.umich.edu/education/med/oernetwork/med/microbiology/clinical-microbio-lab/2009). Copyright 2009-2010, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology and Cary Engleberg. This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
06:45

English subtitles

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