Challenging the proposed causes of the PCR plateau phase

Publication date: March 2019Source: Biomolecular Detection and Quantification, Volume 17Author(s): Linda Jansson, Johannes HedmanAbstractDespite the wide-spread use of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in various life-science applications, the causes of arrested amplicon generation in late cycles have not been confidently identified. This so-called plateau phase has been attributed to depletion or thermal break-down of primers or nucleotides, thermal inactivation of the DNA polymerase, and product accumulation resulting in competition between primer annealing and product re-hybridization as well as blocking of DNA polymerase by double-stranded amplicons. In the current study, we experimentally investigate the proposed limiting factors of PCR product formation. By applying robust and validated qPCR assays, we elucidate the impact of adding non-target and target amplicons to the reactions, mimicking the high amount of products in late PCR cycles. Further, the impact of increased primer concentrations and thermal stability of reagents are explored. Our results show that high amounts of non-target amplicons inhibit amplification by binding to the DNA polymerase, but that this effect is counteracted by addition of more DNA polymerase or prolonged annealing/extension times. Adding high amounts of target amplicons that also act as templates in the reaction is far less inhibitory to amplification, although a decrease in amplification rate is seen. When primer concentrations are inc...
Source: Biomolecular Detection and Quantification - Category: Molecular Biology Source Type: research