Long PCR Protocol

Long-PCR Reagents and Guidelines

(Modified from Cheng et al. (1))


General Guidelines for Long-PCR Conditions and Enzyme Mixtures

Efficient Long-PCR results from the use of two polymerases: a non-proofreading polymerase is the main polymerase in the reaction, and a proofreading polymerase (3' to 5' exo) is present at a lower concentration. Following the results of Cheng et al. (1) we have had success using Tth (ABI/Perkin-Elmer) as the main-component polymerase and Vent (New England Biolabs) as the fractional-component polymerase.

For PCR with low-complexity templates (e.g., plasmid and cosmid inserts)

50 microliter reaction in 1X Long-PCR buffer (5X recipe below)

For PCR with moderate-complexity templates (e.g., bacterial genomic DNA)

For PCR with high-complexity templates (e.g., human genomic DNA)


Long-PCR Buffer

In our hands tricine buffer works well with Tth but not as well with Taq. The pH is probably critical to the efficiency of amplification of long targets (1).

5X Long-PCR Buffer

A 5X buffer stock containing 5% DMSO (1% final conc.) can easily be made using 1 M Tricine and 1 M KOAc stock solutions as follows:

10 ml 5X buffer


Cycle times and temperatures

Generally, we have been using two temperature cycles with one annealing/extension step @ 68 degrees C and a short melting step @ 94 degrees C. Presently, a rough formula for calculating annealing/extension times is 1 min + (2.5 sec/100 bases) = n. The constant one minute is probably necessary for primer annealing/extension to occur; at 68 degrees C the kinetics of primer-template annealing and melting may become the limiting factor in the rate of primer extension.

Generic Long-PCR Program

The 15 sec cycle extension for cycles 16-30 may be necessary for only the longest PCR (>15-20 kb), please experiment.

Hot Starts

I use a hot start method for all of my L-PCR. I split the reaction into two parts: a template/primer fraction which is 3/4 or 4/5 of the reaction volume, and a polymerase fraction which constitutes the remaining 1/4 or 1/5 of the reaction. Each fraction is 1X for buffer concentration. The polymerase fraction contains only polymerase, buffer and water; all other components are included in the template/primer fraction. I put the template/primer fraction in the tube and heat in the PCR machine to 94 degrees C for 10 sec. to denature. I then add the polymerase fraction during the first annealing/extension step. Alternatively, after denaturing, an 80 degree step can be used for adding the polymerase (P.E.).


Picking Primers

We have had success using the following guidelines for primers (these are not inviolable rules, they are simply guidelines):

REFERENCES

1. Cheng, S., Fockler, C., Barnes, W., Higuchi, R. Effective amplification of long targets from cloned inserts and human genomic DNA. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 91, 5695-5699 (1994).

2. Crameri, A. and Stemmer, W. 10^20-Fold aptamer library amplification without gel purification. Nucleic Acids Research 21, 4410 (1993)


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Last updated 15 Apr 1995 by Pete Estep, pestep@rascal.med.harvard.edu