BIOLOGY 1M03 Lecture 14: Module Notes - Theme 4, Module 3

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Ability to amplify dna in a tube via the polymerase chain reaction (or pcr) technique was developed by kary mullis in 1985. Technique allows scientists to be able to copy (or amplify) millions of copies of dna from small starting samples. Key components - pcr: dna sample is placed into a tube containing a buffered solution (essential ions and salts) and a pair of short single-stranded dna primers (that are usually 15-30 nucleotides in length) Primers bind in a complementary manner to specific regions of the template dna and serve as starting points for dna copying: free deoxyribonucleotides (or dntps), are also added within the tube. This cycle brings about a chain reaction that produces an exponentially growing population of identical dna molecules. A researcher will design primers that bind to or anneal to their complementary sequence on either side of the dna sequence of interest on the dna template strands.

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