Introduction

Quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) is one of the most core quantitative detection technologies in the molecular diagnostics field. Building upon traditional PCR, it adds a fluorescence monitoring system that enables real-time detection of product accumulation during amplification, allowing accurate quantification of target nucleic acids. From infectious disease viral load monitoring (HIV, HBV, CMV) to gene expression analysis (mRNA, miRNA), from copy number variation detection to pathogen quantification, qPCR technology has become an indispensable tool in clinical diagnostics and life science research due to its high sensitivity, wide dynamic range, and operational convenience. The performance of high-quality qPCR reagents heavily depends on the proper selection and combination of hot-start DNA polymerases, dNTPs, fluorescent probes/dyes, passive reference dyes (ROX), buffers, stabilizers, and other raw materials. As the third article in the molecular diagnostics raw material series (the second after the general outline), this article systematically introduces the technical principles, main application areas, fluorescence chemistry systems, key raw material selection points, formulation examples, and frequently asked questions for qPCR, providing a complete raw material technical reference for qPCR reagent development.

I. Overview of qPCR Technology

1.1 Basic Principle of qPCR

qPCR adds a fluorescence monitoring system to the thermal cycling of traditional PCR. At the end of each cycle's extension phase (or at the end of annealing/extension), the instrument collects fluorescence signals, recording the change in fluorescence intensity with cycle number, generating an amplification curve. By analyzing the Ct value (cycle threshold — the cycle number at which fluorescence signal reaches a set threshold), quantification of the starting template is achieved.

qPCR Quantification Principle:

Parameter Explanation Relationship
Ct Value Cycle number at which fluorescence reaches threshold Ct ∝ -log(starting template amount)
Starting Template Amount Quantity of target nucleic acid at reaction start Higher amount = lower Ct value
Standard Curve Ct values vs known concentration standards Used for absolute quantification

1.2 qPCR vs Traditional PCR Comparison

Feature Traditional PCR qPCR
Detection Method End-point detection (gel electrophoresis) Real-time detection (fluorescence monitoring)
Quantification Capability Semi-quantitative/qualitative Absolute/relative quantification
Dynamic Range 10²-10³ 10⁶-10⁹
Sensitivity Medium High (1-10 copies/reaction)
Detection Time 1.5-3 hours 1-2 hours
Post-Processing Required (gel electrophoresis) Not required
Contamination Risk Higher (tube opening) Lower (closed-tube detection)
Throughput Low-medium High (96/384-well plates)

1.3 Main Application Areas of qPCR

Application Area Specific Test Items Format Clinical/Application Significance
Viral Load Monitoring HIV, HBV, HCV, CMV, EBV Absolute quantification Antiviral therapy efficacy monitoring
Gene Expression Analysis mRNA, miRNA, lncRNA quantification Relative quantification (ΔΔCt) Biomarker discovery, mechanism research
Pathogen Detection & Quantification SARS-CoV-2, Influenza, RSV Absolute quantification Infectious disease diagnosis
Copy Number Variation (CNV) Analysis Gene copy number changes Relative quantification Genetic disease diagnosis
Tumor Marker Detection Fusion genes, mutation quantification Absolute/relative quantification Companion diagnostics
GMO Detection Transgene copy number Absolute quantification Food safety

1.4 qPCR Quantification Methods

Quantification Method Principle Advantages/Disadvantages Application Scenarios
Absolute Quantification Standard curve of Ct vs concentration; interpolate unknown samples Accurate, requires standards Viral load, pathogen quantification
Relative Quantification (ΔΔCt Method) Compare target gene Ct to reference gene; calculate relative expression change No standards needed, simple operation Gene expression analysis
Relative Quantification (Standard Curve Method) Standard curve for target and reference More accurate than ΔΔCt Gene expression analysis
Digital PCR (dPCR) Assisted End-point dilution, absolute quantification, no standard curve needed Extremely high precision, higher cost Rare mutation detection

II. qPCR Fluorescence Chemistry Systems

qPCR fluorescence signals originate from two main chemistry systems: DNA-binding dyes and fluorescent probes.

2.1 DNA-Binding Dyes (SYBR Green Method)

Principle: SYBR Green I is an asymmetric cyanine dye. Free dye has weak fluorescence, but upon binding to double-stranded DNA (dsDNA), fluorescence is enhanced more than 1000-fold. As PCR product accumulates, dsDNA increases, and fluorescence signal increases.

Feature SYBR Green I EvaGreen SYTO Series
Excitation/Emission (nm) 497/520 500/530 Dye-dependent
Fluorescence Enhancement >1000× >1000× 200-500×
PCR Inhibition Low Very low Very low
Thermal Stability Moderate (protect from light) Good Good
Application Scenarios Routine qPCR High-resolution melting curve Multiplex qPCR

SYBR Green Method Advantages:

  • Low cost (no probe synthesis required)

  • Can perform melting curve analysis (differentiates non-specific products)

  • Suitable for primer screening and system optimization

SYBR Green Method Disadvantages:

  • Lower specificity (non-specific products also generate signal)

  • Cannot perform multiplex detection (single channel)

  • Sensitive to primer dimers

2.2 Fluorescent Probes (TaqMan Method)

Principle: A TaqMan probe is an oligonucleotide labeled with a fluorescent reporter at the 5' end (e.g., FAM) and a quencher at the 3' end (e.g., BHQ1). In the intact probe, reporter fluorescence is absorbed by the quencher. During PCR extension, the 5'→3' exonuclease activity of Taq polymerase cleaves the probe, separating the reporter from the quencher, generating fluorescence signal. Fluorescence intensity is proportional to the amount of amplified product.

Common Fluorescent Reporter and Quencher Combinations:

Fluorescent Reporter Excitation/Emission (nm) Recommended Quencher Typical Use
FAM 494/518 BHQ1, TAMRA Single-plex or lowest wavelength channel in multiplex
VIC / HEX 535/554 BHQ1 Second channel in multiplex detection
ROX 575/602 BHQ2 Multiplex detection, passive reference dye
CY5 650/670 BHQ2, BHQ3 Far-red channel in multiplex
TAMRA 565/580 BHQ2 Traditional probe (self-quenching)

TaqMan Method Advantages:

  • High specificity (probe hybridization adds an extra layer of specificity)

  • Can perform multiplex detection (different fluorescence channels)

  • High data quality (low background, high signal-to-noise ratio)

TaqMan Method Disadvantages:

  • Higher cost (probe synthesis required)

  • Cannot perform melting curve analysis

  • Probe design requires optimization (Tm, GC content, secondary structure)

2.3 Other Fluorescent Probe Technologies

Probe Type Principle Advantages Application Scenarios
Molecular Beacon Hairpin structure; fluorescence restored upon target binding High specificity, can distinguish single-base differences SNP detection
Hybridization Probes (FRET) Adjacent pair; energy transfer upon hybridization Can be used for melting curve analysis Genotyping
Eclipse Probe Duplex-like structure; fluorescence enhanced upon hybridization Low background Multiplex detection
LNA Probe Locked nucleic acid modification; higher Tm Very high detection sensitivity Rare mutation detection

2.4 Passive Reference Dye (ROX)

ROX is an inert fluorescent dye that does not participate in PCR reactions. It is used to normalize fluorescence signal differences between wells.

ROX Functions:

  • Corrects for well-to-well volume differences

  • Corrects for volume changes due to evaporation

  • Corrects for well-to-well differences in optical detection systems

Instrument ROX Requirements:

Instrument Brand ROX Requirement Explanation
Applied Biosystems ROX required Uses ROX for signal normalization
Bio-Rad ROX not required Different optical system design
Roche ROX not required No normalization needed
Agilent ROX optional Can be added or not
Qiagen Instrument-dependent Refer to manual

III. Key Raw Materials and Solutions for qPCR

3.1 Hot-Start DNA Polymerase — The "Engine" of Amplification

qPCR has specific requirements for DNA polymerases: must have hot-start properties to prevent non-specific amplification and primer dimers; requires high processivity to support efficient amplification; typically requires 5'→3' exonuclease activity to support TaqMan probe cleavage.

Enzyme Type Features Application Scenarios Recommended Specification
Antibody-Modified Hot-Start Taq Anti-Taq antibody inhibits activity; activated at 95°C Routine qPCR 5-10 U/μL
Chemically Modified Hot-Start Taq Chemical group blocks activity; requires longer activation High-sensitivity detection 5-10 U/μL
Hot-Start Taq (5'→3' Exonuclease Activity) Supports TaqMan probe cleavage TaqMan qPCR 5-10 U/μL
Engineered Hot-Start Polymerase High processivity, inhibitor-tolerant Complex sample detection 5-10 U/μL

Advantages of Hot-Start Taq in qPCR:

Feature Standard Taq Hot-Start Taq
Non-Specific Amplification High Low
Primer Dimers Common Rare
Low-Copy Detection Ability Low High
Multiplex qPCR Suitability Poor Good

3.2 Nucleotides (dNTPs, dUTP) — The "Building Blocks"

qPCR requires extremely high purity dNTPs (≥99% by HPLC), as impurities can affect fluorescence detection accuracy and amplification efficiency.

Raw Material CAS No. Recommended Specification Function
dATP 1927-31-7 ≥99% (HPLC), DNase/RNase free Adenine nucleotide
dCTP 2056-98-6 ≥99% (HPLC), DNase/RNase free Cytosine nucleotide
dGTP 2564-35-4 ≥99% (HPLC), DNase/RNase free Guanine nucleotide
dTTP 365-08-2 ≥99% (HPLC), DNase/RNase free Thymine nucleotide
dUTP 1175-53-7 ≥99% (HPLC), DNase/RNase free Used with UNG for carryover prevention

dNTP Considerations for qPCR:

  • Use dUTP to replace part or all of dTTP along with UNG enzyme to prevent carryover contamination

  • Excess dNTP concentration can inhibit fluorescence signal (especially SYBR Green)

  • Poor quality dNTPs cause abnormal amplification curves (low plateau, Ct value drift)

3.3 Primers and Probes — The "Navigation System" of Detection

qPCR primer design is similar to traditional PCR but requires higher specificity and efficiency. Probe design is critical for successful TaqMan qPCR.

Special qPCR Primer Design Requirements:

Parameter Traditional PCR qPCR Explanation
Amplicon Length 100-2000 bp 70-150 bp Shorter amplicons improve efficiency
Primer Tm 50-65°C 58-62°C Match probe Tm
Tm Difference ≤5°C ≤2°C Forward and reverse primers have similar Tm
Amplification Efficiency Not critical Must be 90-110% Affects quantification accuracy

TaqMan Probe Design Guidelines:

Parameter Recommended Range Explanation
Length 18-30 nt Shorter than primers
Tm 65-70°C 5-10°C higher than primer Tm
GC Content 40-65% Avoid consecutive Gs
5' End Cannot be G G quenches fluorescence
Relation to Primers No overlap with primer annealing regions Avoid interference
Secondary Structure No hairpins or dimers Affects hybridization efficiency

3.4 Buffer and Mg²⁺ — The "Environment Stabilizers" of Amplification

qPCR buffer needs to provide optimal conditions for the polymerase while supporting fluorescence dye stability and probe hybridization efficiency.

Key qPCR Buffer Components:

Component Recommended Concentration Function
Tris-HCl (pH 8.5-9.0) 10-50 mM Maintains pH stability
KCl 20-50 mM Provides ionic strength
(NH₄)₂SO₄ 15-30 mM Increases specificity (optional)
MgCl₂ 2-6 mM Polymerase cofactor
BSA 0.1-1 mg/mL Stabilizes enzyme, reduces adsorption
Glycerol 5-10% Protects enzyme activity
Tween-20 / Triton X-100 0.01-0.1% Improves enzyme activity

Importance of Mg²⁺ in qPCR:

  • Mg²⁺ concentration affects polymerase activity, primer annealing, and product specificity

  • For SYBR Green systems, Mg²⁺ concentration affects fluorescence signal intensity

  • For TaqMan systems, Mg²⁺ concentration affects probe cleavage efficiency

  • Optimal concentration must be optimized based on primers, probes, and template (typically 2-6 mM)

3.5 Passive Reference Dye (ROX)

Feature Explanation
Function Normalizes well-to-well fluorescence differences, improves data accuracy
Applicable Instruments Applied Biosystems (7300, 7500, 7900, QuantStudio series)
Recommended Concentration Instrument-dependent: Low ROX (e.g., 7500) or High ROX (e.g., 7900)
Storage Conditions -20°C, protect from light

3.6 Stabilizers and Preservatives

Raw Material CAS No. Recommended Concentration Main Application Precautions
BSA 9048-46-8 0.1-1 mg/mL Stabilizes enzyme, reduces adsorption DNase/RNase free
Trehalose 6138-23-4 2-5% Lyoprotection, master mix thermal stability Extends shelf life
Glycerol 56-81-5 5-50% Cryoprotection for enzymes Store at -20°C
ProClin 300 ⚠️ Prohibited in qPCR master mixes Inhibits polymerase
Sodium azide 26628-22-8 ⚠️ Prohibited in qPCR master mixes Inhibits polymerase
DMSO 67-68-5 1-5% Reduces secondary structure, improves amplification For GC-rich templates

Critical Warnings:

  • ⚠️ qPCR reagents (including master mixes) must NOT contain sodium azide or ProClin 300 — both strongly inhibit DNA polymerase activity

  • ⚠️ Fluorescent probes must be stored protected from light — photobleaching reduces fluorescence signal

  • ⚠️ SYBR Green I must be stored protected from light — prolonged light exposure causes degradation

IV. qPCR Formulation Examples

4.1 2× qPCR Master Mix (SYBR Green) Formulation

Component Concentration (2×) Final Concentration (1×) Function
Tris-HCl (pH 8.5) 40-100 mM 20-50 mM Buffer
KCl 100 mM 50 mM Ionic strength
MgCl₂ 4-8 mM 2-4 mM Cofactor
dNTPs each 400-600 μM 200-300 μM Nucleotide substrates
Hot-Start Taq Polymerase 2-5 U/μL 1-2.5 U/μL DNA amplification
SYBR Green I 2-5× 1-2.5× Fluorescent dye
ROX (optional) As appropriate Passive reference dye
BSA 1-2 mg/mL 0.5-1 mg/mL Stabilizer
Glycerol 10% 5% Cryoprotectant
Stabilizers As appropriate Extends shelf life

4.2 2× qPCR Master Mix (TaqMan Probe) Formulation

Component Concentration (2×) Final Concentration (1×) Function
Tris-HCl (pH 8.5) 40-100 mM 20-50 mM Buffer
KCl / (NH₄)₂SO₄ 100-160 mM 50-80 mM Ionic strength
MgCl₂ 4-8 mM 2-4 mM Cofactor
dNTPs (with dUTP) 400-600 μM 200-300 μM Nucleotide substrates
Hot-Start Taq Polymerase 2-5 U/μL 1-2.5 U/μL DNA amplification + probe cleavage
UNG enzyme (optional) 0.2-0.5 U/μL 0.1-0.25 U/μL Prevents carryover contamination
ROX (optional) As appropriate Passive reference dye
BSA 1-2 mg/mL 0.5-1 mg/mL Stabilizer
Glycerol 10% 5% Cryoprotectant

4.3 Primer-Probe Mix Formulation (20×)

Component Final Concentration (1×) Concentration (20× Stock) Explanation
Forward Primer 100-500 nM 2-10 μM Each primer final concentration
Reverse Primer 100-500 nM 2-10 μM Each primer final concentration
TaqMan Probe 50-250 nM 1-5 μM Protect from light
Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) 10 mM Buffer
EDTA 0.1 mM Chelating agent

4.4 Standard qPCR Reaction System (20 μL)

Component Volume Final Concentration Explanation
2× qPCR Master Mix 10 μL
Primer-Probe Mix (20×) 1 μL If using
Forward Primer (10 μM) 0.4-1 μL 0.2-0.5 μM If adding separately
Reverse Primer (10 μM) 0.4-1 μL 0.2-0.5 μM If adding separately
Template DNA/cDNA 2-5 μL 1 pg - 100 ng Adjust based on template type
Water (Molecular Biology Grade) Bring to 20 μL

4.5 Typical qPCR Thermal Cycling Program (Two-Step)

Step Temperature Time Cycles Fluorescence Acquisition Explanation
Initial Denaturation 95°C 2-10 minutes 1 No Activate hot-start enzyme
Denaturation 95°C 10-20 seconds 40 No Strand separation
Annealing/Extension 60°C 20-60 seconds 40 Yes Primer annealing + extension + fluorescence collection
Melting Curve (SYBR Green) 60-95°C Stepwise increase 1 Yes Differentiates non-specific products

Special Requirements for TaqMan Programs:

  • Annealing/extension step must be long enough for probe binding and cleavage (typically ≥30 seconds)

  • Fluorescence acquisition is always at the end of the annealing/extension step

V. qPCR Data Analysis

5.1 Amplification Curve

Phase Explanation Characteristics
Baseline Phase Low fluorescence, not yet above background Cycles 0-10
Exponential Phase Fluorescence begins exponential growth Cycles 10-25, best quantification window
Linear Phase Amplification efficiency decreases, signal plateaus Cycles 25-30
Plateau Phase Product accumulation reaches saturation Cycles >30

5.2 Melting Curve (SYBR Green)

Melting curve analysis is an important tool for verifying amplification specificity in SYBR Green method.

Feature Single Peak Multiple Peaks
Meaning Single amplification product Multiple products or primer dimers
Melt Temperature (Tm) Product-specific, correlated to GC content and length
Corrective Action Can proceed with quantification Need to optimize primers or annealing temperature

5.3 Standard Curve

Parameter Meaning Acceptance Criteria
R² (Coefficient of Determination) Goodness of linear fit ≥0.99
Amplification Efficiency (E) E = 10^{-1/slope} - 1 90-110% (1.9-2.1 fold/cycle)
Slope Standard curve slope -3.1 to -3.6

5.4 Absolute vs Relative Quantification

Quantification Method Calculation Standards Required Application Scenarios
Absolute Quantification Standard curve → interpolate unknowns Yes Viral load, pathogen quantification
Relative Quantification (ΔΔCt Method) ΔCt = Ct(target) - Ct(reference); ΔΔCt = ΔCt(treated) - ΔCt(control); Fold change = 2^{-ΔΔCt} No Gene expression analysis

VI. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q1: No amplification curve or Ct value too high in qPCR. What are possible causes?

A: No signal or high Ct values are usually related to the following factors:

Cause Solution
Insufficient or degraded template Increase template amount, use fresh template
Primer design issue Redesign primers, check Tm and amplicon length
Probe design issue (TaqMan) Check probe Tm is 5-10°C higher than primer Tm, avoid 5' G
Reagent preparation issue Check for missing components, use fresh reagents
Thermal cycling program issue Check annealing temperature, ensure sufficient initial denaturation time
Instrument issue Check fluorescence channel settings, confirm ROX is not interfering

Q2: How to resolve non-specific amplification or primer dimers in qPCR?

A: Non-specific amplification is usually related to the following factors:

Cause Solution
Annealing temperature too low Increase annealing temperature by 2-5°C
Mg²⁺ concentration too high Reduce Mg²⁺ concentration by 0.5-1 mM
Primer concentration too high Reduce primers to 100-200 nM
Too much template Dilute template 10-100 fold
Too many cycles Reduce cycles to 35-40
Non-hot-start polymerase Use hot-start Taq polymerase

Q3: How to improve low amplification efficiency (<90%) in qPCR?

A: Low amplification efficiency is usually related to the following factors:

Cause Solution
Primer design issue Optimize primers, ensure amplicon length 70-150 bp
Probe design issue (TaqMan) Check probe Tm and secondary structure
Insufficient Mg²⁺ concentration Increase Mg²⁺ concentration to 3-5 mM
Insufficient or excessive dNTP concentration Optimize dNTP concentration (200-300 μM each)
Inhibitors in template Dilute template, use inhibitor-tolerant polymerase
Suboptimal thermal cycling conditions Check ramp rates, extend extension time
Degraded reagents Use fresh reagents, check storage conditions

Q4: How to resolve multiple peaks in melting curve (SYBR Green)?

A: Multiple melting curve peaks indicate non-specific products or primer dimers:

Cause Solution
Non-specific amplification Increase annealing temperature, redesign primers
Primer dimers Redesign primers (avoid complementary sequences)
Template contamination Use nuclease-free water as negative control
Genomic DNA contamination (RNA samples) Treat RNA samples with DNase I

Q5: How to resolve poor qPCR reproducibility with high well-to-well Ct variation?

A: Poor reproducibility is usually related to the following factors:

Cause Solution
Inaccurate pipetting Use master mix to reduce pipetting steps, calibrate pipettes
Evaporation Use high-quality sealing film, ensure tight seal
Bubbles Centrifuge after loading (1000 rpm, 1-2 minutes)
Poor plate quality Use qPCR-specific plates
Instrument well-to-well variation Use ROX passive reference dye for normalization (if applicable)
Reagents not mixed Mix thoroughly before use

Q6: Can sodium azide or ProClin 300 be used as preservatives in qPCR reagents?

AAbsolutely NOT.

  • Sodium azide: Strongly inhibits DNA polymerase activity

  • ProClin 300: Also inhibits DNA polymerase activity

Recommendation: Use molecular biology grade water and aseptic technique. For master mixes requiring stability, use trehalose (2-5%) and BSA (0.1-1 mg/mL) as stabilizers.

Q7: How to determine if qPCR amplification efficiency is acceptable?

A: Assess through standard curve analysis:



Parameter Acceptance Range Formula
≥0.99 Linear correlation coefficient
Amplification Efficiency (E) 90-110% E = (10^{-1/slope} - 1) × 100%
Slope -3.1 to -3.6

Q8: How to choose between SYBR Green and TaqMan methods?

A: Choice depends on experimental purpose and budget:

Consideration SYBR Green TaqMan
Cost Low High (probe synthesis required)
Specificity Lower (requires melting curve verification) High (extra hybridization specificity)
Multiplex Detection Single channel Multi-channel (up to 5-6 plex)
Suitable Scenarios Primer screening, gene expression, R&D Clinical diagnostics, viral load, multiplex detection
Experimental Time Short (no probe design) Longer (probe design and validation)

Q9: What is the correct method for using ROX in qPCR?

A: Follow these principles:

Step Operation
Confirm if instrument requires ROX Consult instrument manual
Use master mix recommended concentration High ROX (e.g., Applied Biosystems 7900) or Low ROX (e.g., 7500)
Avoid ROX excess Signal saturation affects normalization
Store ROX protected from light Photobleaching reduces signal

Q10: How to prevent carryover contamination in qPCR?

A: Follow these contamination control strategies:

Measure Operation
Physical Separation Strictly separate sample prep, reaction setup, and amplification/detection areas
Use dUTP/UNG System Use dUTP to replace part of dTTP in master mix; add UNG enzyme; degrade dU-containing contaminants during initial PCR step
Dedicated Pipettes Use separate pipettes for each area
Use Filter Tips Prevent aerosols from entering pipettes
Regular Cleaning Wipe work surfaces with 10% bleach or PCR cleaner

VII. Summary

qPCR, as the most core quantitative detection technology in molecular diagnostics, has reagent performance that heavily depends on the proper selection and combination of hot-start DNA polymerases, dNTPs, fluorescent probes/dyes, passive reference dyes (ROX), buffers, stabilizers, and other raw materials.

Need Bulk Quantities? Let’s Talk Strategy

To ensure you get the most competitive rates and reliable lead times for your specific scale, we offer customized pricing for industrial orders.

Contact our technical sales team today for a fast, formal quotation tailored to your project requirements.

—> Contact Our Technical Team

Related Article

By 李艳

Share:

Just added to your wishlist:
My Wishlist
You've just added this product to the cart:
Go to cart page