A long-hidden prevalent PCR artifact and its application in DNA library screening

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A long-hidden prevalent PCR artifact and its application in DNA library screening

Authors

Jiang, X.; Jorgensen, T. S.; Wang, F.; Lien, A.; Gren, T.; Munro, L. J.; Zhang, H.; Weber, T.

Abstract

PCR artifacts can lead to aberrant DNA products and confound result interpretation, posing significant challenges in research and diagnostics. Traditionally, it has been blamed to misannealing of primers on unintended sites. However, by sequencing, we find that most PCR byproducts and artifacts actually have both primers bound correctly but lack a middle part of the target, a phenomenon we named as PCR leaping. The leaping occurs at random positions, is independent of sequence repeats and requires a single piece template, indicating an unprecedented mechanism. It is observed with various polymerases, template qualities, GC contents, and PCR programs, thus necessitating a reset of our PCR understanding and careful consideration in future studies, for example in CRISPR editing validations. On the other hand, it provides a simple way of DNA end pairing, based on which we develop a high throughput DNA library screening method for natural product discovery at substantially reduced cost.

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