Concepts

Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectScience

Definition

A laboratory technique that rapidly makes millions of copies of a specific DNA segment, allowing tiny amounts of genetic material to be amplified for study or detection.

Key points

  • PCR repeatedly cycles through three steps: denaturation (heating to separate the DNA strands), annealing (short primers attach to the target), and extension (the enzyme DNA polymerase builds new strands).
  • It uses a heat-stable enzyme, Taq polymerase, originally from a bacterium living in hot springs, which survives the high temperatures of each cycle.
  • The method was developed by Kary Mullis, who won the 1993 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
  • RT-PCR (reverse transcription PCR) first converts RNA into DNA and is the standard confirmatory test for viruses such as the one causing COVID-19.
  • Applications include disease diagnosis, DNA fingerprinting in forensics, paternity testing, and detecting genetic disorders.

Why it matters for CAPF

PCR and RT-PCR (COVID-19 testing), DNA amplification, Taq polymerase, and forensic DNA work are recurring biotechnology facts with a clear policing and crime-investigation link.

Common confusion

PCR amplifies (copies) DNA; it does not edit DNA like CRISPR. RT-PCR is used for RNA viruses because it first makes a DNA copy of the RNA; ordinary PCR works directly on DNA. PCR is a diagnostic and copying tool, not a treatment.

One-line recall

PCR copies a DNA segment millions of times through heat cycles using Taq polymerase; RT-PCR (for RNA) is the gold-standard COVID-19 test and a forensic staple.

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Parent note

biotechnology and genetics

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