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Polymerase Chain Reaction
It is possible to replicate subsequences of a DNA sequence starting at almost any point
as long as we know a small number of the nucleotides, appearing
just before that point. This replication is done using a
technology called polymerase chain reaction, which has had a
tremendous impact on experimental molecular biology.
Reaction of replication in a cell starts as a consequence of
initiation a replication and then by an enzyme which continues
that replication (according to the reading direction of the DNA). When
considering polymerase chain reaction we perform the initiation
and let the enzyme do the rest.
Knowing few nucleotides allows one to synthesize a sequence that is
complementary to those few nucleotides. This complementary sequence
can be used to create a 'primer', which finds its way to the point
in the long DNA sequence containing the complement of the primer. It then
hybridizes (bonds) with the longer sequence at that point. This creates the
conditions that allow the replication of part of the original
sequence: the replication is done by exposing the DNA to an enzyme which has
the ability to duplicate sequences called DNA polymerase. After a while we get two
subsequences. Now we can warm what we got for a short time and the
bonds will separate - and again we can apply the enzyme and
do the same to the separated subsequences and get more and more
copies.
Next: Bibliography
Up: Pairwise Alignment
Previous: Longest Common Non Contiguous
Peer Itsik
2000-11-20