Direct PCR Makes PCR Closer to Point-of-Care Testing
Direct PCR is a method that amplifies DNA directly from animal or plant tissues without prior nucleic acid extraction. In many ways, direct PCR works similarly to conventional PCR.
The main difference lies in the customized buffers used in direct PCR, which allow amplification directly from crude samples without nucleic acid purification. However, this places specific demands on the robustness and compatibility of the enzymes and buffers used.
Although PCR inhibitors are often present to some degree in most samples, direct PCR can still enable reliable amplification through the activity of robust enzymes and buffers. In contrast, conventional PCR requires high-quality nucleic acid templates, as the presence of proteins and other impurities inhibits the reaction. Direct PCR has recently emerged as a popular technique for molecular diagnostics.
Direct PCR was first applied in animal and plant research involving blood, tissues and hairs from mice, cats, chickens, rabbits, sheep, cattle etc. as well as plant leaves and seeds. It enabled genetic typing, transgenic analysis, plasmid detection, gene knockout studies, DNA barcoding, species identification and SNP analysis without tedious nucleic acid extraction.
These applications share some common traits. The target genes are usually abundant while nucleic acid extraction is cumbersome. By saving time and cost, direct PCR has little impact on the results.
The application of direct PCR for pathogen detection has occurred in the past few years as some PCR companies have focused innovations in this direction, especially with the recent COVID-19 pandemic which has spawned many such testing products.
Sample lysis solutions can be self-made or commercially obtained. Differences in formulation lead to variability in lysis ability and time e.g. 30 min or overnight for animal tissues, and 3-10 min for viruses.
Heat-activated DNA polymerases are recommended to improve specificity and amplification capability. Robust polymerases tolerant to sample debris are central for direct PCR success.
Sample processing releases proteins, lipids, cell debris that inhibits PCR, necessitating additives to diminish their impact.
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