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General PCR is needed before semi-quantitative PCR. Why do some people need to do it once?
Both fluorescence quantitative PCR and semi-quantitative RT-PCR can be used to detect gene expression, but their detection contents are somewhat different. Fluorescence quantitative PCR is to add a fluorescent dye (sybr green) that can specifically bind to double-stranded DNA or a fluorescent probe (taqman) that can bind to the target DNA fragment in the PCR reaction system, monitor the fluorescence changes during the PCR process, and compare them with those of some housekeeping genes to reflect the expression amount of the target gene. The main valid data of fluorescence quantitative PCR is the time when the fluorescence signal increases to half of the maximum. Semi-quantitative RT-PCR indirectly reflects the abundance of the original template by the brightness of electrophoresis bands after RT-PCR electrophoresis of the final product. Fluorescence quantitative PCR can monitor the changes of PCR amplification in the whole process, and can be relatively quantitative with the amplification curve of housekeeping genes, and the accuracy of quantitative gene expression is higher than that of semi-quantitative RT-PCR. Semi-quantitative RT-PCR is the final product of monitoring. When the gene expression level is high, the PCR system is likely to reach saturation in the middle and late stage of the reaction. Therefore, semi-quantitative RT-PCR can not accurately explain the problem for high-level expressed genes. However, if you want to publish a high-level paper, some abnormal foreigners will not recognize the results of single fluorescence quantitative PCR, and they need the author to do a semi-quantitative RT-PCR as an auxiliary proof.

The primer design principles of semi-quantitative RT-PCR and fluorescence quantitative PCR are different, in other words, the primers of the two are not universal. Therefore, the annealing temperature is naturally different, and how it is different depends on the primers actually used.