Team:Greenfield IN-Rihm-HS/May 4, 2011
From 2011.igem.org
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+ | Today we learned about primers, how to design them, and how they work. To design a primer, you have to take the last 20 base pairs of your first part, and the first 20 base paris of your second part. This creates a 40 base pair sequence that is your new primer. When the DNA is denatured, the beginning of the primer recognizes the last 20 base pairs of your first part. DNA polymerase then |
Revision as of 14:29, 7 June 2011
May 4, 2011
Today we learned about primers, how to design them, and how they work. To design a primer, you have to take the last 20 base pairs of your first part, and the first 20 base paris of your second part. This creates a 40 base pair sequence that is your new primer. When the DNA is denatured, the beginning of the primer recognizes the last 20 base pairs of your first part. DNA polymerase then