Group-specific (family-specific primer set) and Unique PCR primers design

The group-specific amplification also call as family specific or universal amplification is most important tool for comparative studies of genes and genomes, including studies of evolution and cloning new sequences. The specific sequences that link to concrete organism can be discovered by DNA polymorphism in these conservative genome regions (genes, transposable or repeat elements). For detection DNA polymorphism in relative sequences will help with design PCR primers around this polymorphic region. Usually, group-specific primer sets were designed by first generating a multiple alignment and then manually identifying most conservative regions for primer design. This way is slow, but easy visual and understandable.
FastPCR design degenerated PCR primers to amplify a conserved (or polymorphic) region of all interesting sequences.
FastPCR automatically designs larger sets of universal primer pairs for all given related sequences, identifies conservative regions with or without sequence alignment and generates suitable primers for all given sequences. All steps of algorithm are automatic and you can influence to the general options for primer design and alignment options. FastPCR will work only with any source of related sequences as long as it is possible to found short consensus sequences. The quality of primer design is dependent on both on sequence relationship, phylogenetic similarity and suitability of the consensus sequence to the design of any good primers. Software is able to generate group-specific primers for each sequence independently, that suit for all sequences.

Unique PCR

The strategy for a unique PCR primer design is opposite to the group-specific PCR primers (probes) design. This case program search unique regions within a DNA sequence and automatically designing primers with minimal user intervention and maximum flexibility. Primer alignment parameters are similar as for in silico PCR and group-specific PCR primers.
The primers with mismatches are more efficient in PCR then the degenerated primers. This concerns the degenerated primers designed from protein sequences.

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