Medical Definition of PCR

1. The first practical system for in vitro amplification of DNA and as such one of the most important recent developments in molecular biology. Two synthetic oligonucleotide primers, which are complementary to two regions of the target DNA (one for each strand) to be amplified, are added to the target DNA (that need not be pure), in the presence of excess deoxynucleotides and Taq polymerase, a heat stable DNA polymerase. In a series (typically 30) of temperature cycles, the target DNA is repeatedly denatured (around 90_C), annealed to the primers (typically at 50-60_C) and a daughter strand extended from the primers (72_C). As the daughter strands themselves act as templates for subsequent cycles, DNA fragments matching both primers are amplified exponentially, rather than linearly. The original DNA need thus be neither pure nor abundant and the polymerase chain reaction has accordingly become widely used not only in research, but in clinical diagnostics and forensic science. Acronym: PCR (14 Oct 1997)

Lexicographical Neighbors of PCR

PC
pc12 cells
PC4 proprotein convertase
PC5 proprotein convertase
PC6 endoprotease
PC8 prohormone convertase
PCA
PCB
pcb's
PCIS
PCMB
PCO
pCO2
PCP
PCP
PCR (current term)
PCR test
PCT
pct
PCTAIRE-2 protein kinase
PCWP
PC board
Pd
Pd
PDA
PDA
PDD
PDE4D3 phosphodiesterase
PDFLP
PDGF

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