PCR technology: principles and applications for DNA amplificationPolymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology is a revolutionary innovation which enables scientists to rapidly generate large amounts of genetic material from a slight trace which would otherwise be too small to analyze. With applications in both research and diagnostics, PCR is becoming a standard procedure in biotechnology and medical diagnostic laboratories. This book is an introduction and guide to the new technology, covering the basic methodologies and their applications in research and medicine, emphasizing practical aspects. Each chapter is written by pioneers in the field and most include detailed protocols and favorite PCR "recipes". Students and researchers in all areas of biotechnology and molecular biology will find this book the introduction to PCR they've been looking for. |
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Page 41
For unknown DNA sequences where no sequence information is available to
serve as the oligonucleotide primer sites, the solution is to create primer sites by
adding flanking DNA of a known sequence. The first example of this approach
was ...
For unknown DNA sequences where no sequence information is available to
serve as the oligonucleotide primer sites, the solution is to create primer sites by
adding flanking DNA of a known sequence. The first example of this approach
was ...
Page 106
Examples include the upstream and downstream flanking regions of coding DNA
and the insertion sites of transposable elements as well as probes of unknown
sequence from the ends of DNA fragments cloned in lambda, cosmid or yeast ...
Examples include the upstream and downstream flanking regions of coding DNA
and the insertion sites of transposable elements as well as probes of unknown
sequence from the ends of DNA fragments cloned in lambda, cosmid or yeast ...
Page 108
Our initial studies used inverse PCR to amplify sequences flanking the
transposable insertion sequence IS7 in natural isolates of Escherichia coli.
Inverse PCR was applied by Triglia et al* to the gene encoding the precursor of
the major ...
Our initial studies used inverse PCR to amplify sequences flanking the
transposable insertion sequence IS7 in natural isolates of Escherichia coli.
Inverse PCR was applied by Triglia et al* to the gene encoding the precursor of
the major ...
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Contents
PART ONE BASIC METHODOLOGY | 1 |
The Design and Optimization of the PCR | 7 |
Taq DNA Polymerase | 17 |
Copyright | |
17 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
PCR Technology: Principles and Applications for DNA Amplification Henry Erlich No preview available - 1989 |
Common terms and phrases
Acad Acids Res aliquot alleles amplification amplification products amplified DNA annealing assay automated B-globin base cDNA cell Cetus chromosome CJ CJ CJ CJ Eh clones concentration containing cycles deletion denaturing denaturing gradient gel detection DGGE diagnosis digestion direct sequencing disease DNA fragments DNA sequence dNTP dot-blot dystrophin Erlich exon Faloona Figure flanking GC-clamp gel electrophoresis genetic genomic genomic DNA heteroduplex Higuchi HPRT human hybridization identified incubation individual inverse PCR lane loci locus markers melting method mismatch molecular molecules mRNA Mullis mutations Natl Nucl nucleotide oligonucleotide primers PCR amplification PCR analysis PCR primers PCR product PCR reaction pmol polymerase chain reaction polymorphism primers Proc procedure protein Protocol ras gene recombination region restriction enzyme reverse transcriptase Saiki Scharf single sperm Sninsky Southern blot specific sperm ssDNA strand synthesis Taq DNA polymerase Taq polymerase target sequence temperature template Tris.HCl tube tumor