Annealing complementary primers

From OpenWetWare
Revision as of 09:07, 1 June 2005 by Reshma P. Shetty (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search

A simple and cheap way to make a short (< 100 bp) piece of DNA is to order two complementary primers from a company such as Invitrogen.

  • When the primers arrive, redissolve them in 50 mM Tris buffer to yield a concentration of ~800 ng/μl.
  • For the annealing mix one recipe that works is as follows -
    • 4 μL of each of the concentrated primers.
    • 4 μL of salt solution (10 mM NaCl)
    • 28 μL of water
  • The salt shields the negative charges on the single-stranded DNA molecules, allowing them to come close enough to bind.
  • Anneal the primers by heating them at least 5°C above their melting point and cooling them down slowly in stages using a Thermocycler. Melting temperature calculations can best be done using software such as VectorNTI or data may come with the primers themselves.
  • A simpler approach is to add the above mix in a PCR tube to a beaker of boiling water and just allow the water to cool down naturally. Most primers pairs with length less than 100bp should be fully melted at 100oC and certainly any non-specific binding should be melted at that temperature.
  • Unless you have ordered your primers with 5' phosphate added you will probably improve the efficiency of any subsequent cloning steps by using adding the 5' phosphate using a protocol such as PNK Treatment of DNA Ends