BSC 114 Lecture Notes - Lecture 24: Genome Size, Hemoglobin, Noncoding Dna

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The polymerase chain reaction (pcr) is an in vitro reaction used to produce many copies of a specified segment of dna. Template dna: contains the target dna sequence to be amplified (e. g. crude chromosomal dna or plasmid dna) Primers: short synthetic, single-stranded dnas that bind to the ends of the dna sequence being amplified. Thermostable dna polymerase: heat-tolerant dna polymerase that catalyzes. Nucleotides: building blocks for synthesis of new dna strands. Buffered solution: provides a suitable, ph stabilized chemical environment required for optimum activity and stability of the dna polymerase. In a pcr, the following steps are repeated: Step 1: denaturation- high temperature is applied to melt the double-stranded template dna. Step 2: annealing- lower temperature incubation allows single-stranded complementary template dnas and dna primers to anneal (bond) Step 3: extension- dna polymerase catalyzes synthesis of new strands of dna complementary to the dna template. Evolution is any change across successive generations in the heritable characteristics (phenotypes) of biological populations.

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