4 research outputs found
Multiple Heat Pulses during PCR Extension Enabling Amplification of GC-Rich Sequences and Reducing Amplification Bias
PCR amplification over GC-rich and/or long repetitive
sequences
is challenging because of thermo-stable structures resulting from
incomplete denaturation, reannealing, and self-annealing of target
sequences. These structures block the DNA polymerase during the extension
step, leading to formation of incomplete extension products and favoring
amplification of nonspecific products rather than specific ones. We
have introduced multiple heat pulses in the extension step of a PCR
cycling protocol to temporarily destabilize such blocking structures,
in order to enhance DNA polymerase extension over GC-rich sequences.
With this novel type of protocol, we were able to amplify all expansions
of CGG repeats in five Fragile X cell lines, as well as extremely
GC-rich nonrepetitive segments of the GNAQ and GP1BB genes. The longest
Fragile X expansion contained 940 CGG repeats, corresponding to about
2.8 kilo bases of 100% GC content. For the GNAQ and GP1BB genes, different
length PCR products in the range of 700 bases to 2 kilobases could
be amplified without addition of cosolvents. As this technique improves
the balance of amplification efficiencies between GC-rich target sequences
of different length, we were able to amplify all of the allelic expansions
even in the presence of the unexpanded allele