NASBA functions as follows: • RNA template added to the reaction mixture, the first primer with the T7 promoter region on its 5' end attaches to its complementary site at the 3' end of the template. • Reverse transcriptase synthesizes the opposite
complementary DNA strand extending the 3' end of the primer, moving
upstream along the RNA template. •
RNAse H destroys the RNA template from the DNA-RNA compound (RNAse H only destroys RNA in RNA-DNA hybrids, but not single-stranded RNA). • The second primer attaches to the 5' end of the (antisense) DNA strand. • Reverse transcriptase again synthesizes another DNA strand from the attached primer resulting in double stranded DNA. •
T7 RNA polymerase binds to the promoter region on the double strand. Since T7 RNA polymerase can only transcribe in the 3' to 5' direction the sense DNA is transcribed and an anti-sense RNA is produced. This is repeated, and the polymerase continuously produces complementary RNA strands of this template which results in amplification. • Now a cyclic phase can begin similar to the previous steps. Here, however, the second primer first binds to the (-)RNA • The reverse transcriptase now produces a (+)cDNA/(-)RNA duplex. • RNAse H again degrades the RNA and the first primer binds to the now single stranded +(cDNA) • The reverse transcriptase now produces the complementary (-)DNA, creating a dsDNA duplex • Exactly like step 6, the T7 polymerase binds to the promoter region to produce (-)RNA, and the cycle is complete. == Clinical applications ==