BioTechniques (Apr 2008)

Plastic versus glass capillaries for rapid-cycle PCR

  • Oluwole Elenitoba-Johnson,
  • Derek David,
  • Niel Crews,
  • Carl T. Wittwer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2144/000112722
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44, no. 4
pp. 487 – 492

Abstract

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Rapid-cycle PCR uses fast temperature transitions and minimal denaturation and annealing times of “0” s to complete 30 cycles in 10 to 30 min. The most popular platform amplifies samples in glass capillaries arranged around a carousel with circulating air for temperature control. Recently, plastic capillary replacements for glass capillaries became available. We compared the performance of plastic and glass capillaries for rapid-cycle PCR. Heat transfer into plastic capillaries was slowed by thicker walls, lower thermal conductivity, and a lower surface area—to-volume ratio than glass capillaries. Whereas the denaturation and annealing target temperatures were reached by samples in glass capillaries, samples in plastic capillaries fell short of these target temperatures by 6°–7°C. Rapid-cycle PCR was performed on two human genomic targets (APOE and ACVRL1) and one plasmid (pBR322) to amplify fragments of 225–300 bp in length with melting temperatures of 90.3°–93.1°C. Real-time amplification data, end-point melting curves, and end-point gel analysis revealed strong, specific amplification of samples in glass and complete amplification failure in plastic. Only the APOE target was successfully amplified by extending the denaturation and annealing times to 5 or 10 s. A 20 s holding period was necessary to reach target temperatures in plastic capillaries.