Waiting
로그인 처리 중...

Trial ends in Request Full Access Tell Your Colleague About Jove
Concept
JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments
Encyclopedia of Experiments: Cancer Research

JoVE 비디오를 활용하시려면 도서관을 통한 기관 구독이 필요합니다. 전체 비디오를 보시려면 로그인하거나 무료 트라이얼을 시작하세요.

 

Droplet Digital Polymerase Chain Reaction: A Method to Generate Nanodroplet PCR Reactions for Detecting Rare Tumor Mutations

Article

Transcript

Droplet digital polymerase chain reaction or dPCR technology partitions reactants of a single PCR reaction into millions of nanodroplet PCR reactions. This mass partitioning followed by amplification detects a minute amount of mutant DNA against a large background of wild-type DNA, enabling early cancer detection. 

To begin, aspirate dPCR master mix containing fluorescently labeled oligonucleotides along with other PCR reagents and a droplet stabilizing oil. Add this master mix directly into the bottom of each well in a PCR strip tube to avoid air bubbles. Next, add DNA samples to the reaction mixture and pipette multiple times to mix.

Now, transfer the entire reaction mixture into a specialized chip of a droplet-generating instrument. Mount a fresh PCR strip tube onto the droplet-generating instrument. The droplet generator combines the sample and oil to form discrete nanodroplets with an encapsulated area that prevents cross-contamination between the droplets.

Once dropletization is complete, transfer the PCR strip tube to a thermal cycler to amplify the target DNA. Subsequently, load the PCR product into a droplet reader containing a fluorescence detector, which counts the fluorescent positive and negative droplets. The number of positive droplets can be used to calculate the target DNA concentration in the sample.

Read Article

Get cutting-edge science videos from JoVE sent straight to your inbox every month.

Waiting X
Simple Hit Counter