Digital PCR assays for DNA targets

Our collection of predesigned or customized dPCR assays supports the analysis of DNA targets for various applications. For CNV or copy number DNA analysis, you can easily detect subtle fold changes in copy number without a standard curve.

For the detection of somatic mutations or other genetic variants, you can quantify low-abundance mutations in a background of wild-type genomic DNA. Or, for microbial detection and monitoring, you can quantify a wide range of microbial targets – including bacterial, fungal, parasitic, viral, antibiotic resistance and virulence factor genes – from diverse samples.

Available Product Categories

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Applications
Copy Number Analysis (92571)
Microbial (1007)
Mutation/Variant Detection (201)
Species
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Human (92771)
All species
A-2 plaque virus (1)
aac(6')-Ib (2)
aatA (1)
What’s next for your dPCR?

Benefit from practical tips for setting up your dPCR assays and additional products for improving your results.

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dPCR CNV Probe Assays

Cat. No.: Varies
For locus-specific analysis of copy number variations and alterations by singleplex or multiplex dPCR
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dPCR Copy Number Assays

Cat. No.: Varies
For locus-specific analysis of copy number variations and alterations
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dPCR Microbial DNA Detection Assays

Cat. No.: Varies
For digital PCR detection of microbial targets, including bacterial, fungal, parasitic, viral, antibiotic resistance or virulence factor genes
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dPCR LNA Mutation Assays

Cat. No.: Varies
For detecting specific DNA sequence mutations related to cancer and oncogenesis
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Customize your dPCR assay for DNA targets

Think the perfect dPCR assay doesn’t exist? Then make your own in just a few clicks with our custom assay design tools for CNV or microbial targets.

How to use dPCR to detect DNA targets

Digital PCR is an excellent tool for detecting low-abundance DNA targets, rare allelic variants, small fold-change differences and targets in complex mixtures. Plus, its accuracy is consistent despite changes in amplification efficiency or the presence of inhibitors.

Consider these key factors when optimizing your dPCR assay for DNA targets:

  • Amplicon length: shorter amplicons preferred (60-150 bp)
  • Primer design: balanced GC content (~40–60%) to reduce dimers and secondary structure
  • Probe design: Probe Tm 8–10°C higher than primers; avoid 5′ G to prevent quenching
  • Specificity, cross-reactivity and assay conditions: Use BLAST to confirm unique targets; LNA probes for SNP discrimination; optimize annealing temperature and primer/probe concentration
  • Controls: Use no-template controls (NTC), positive controls (plasmid or genomic), and reference gene assays (e.g., RPP30) for normalization and contamination check
 
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“Our dPCR assay collection enables precise analysis of DNA targets for diverse applications – including CNV analysis, detection of low-abundance somatic mutations and comprehensive microbial monitoring.”

Dr. Ronny Kellner, Associate Director R&D, QIAGEN

Relevant dPCR products and resources for detecting DNA targets

Let Genomic Services take care of the annoying steps

Let Genomic Services take care of the annoying steps

Unburden yourself from planning, executing or analyzing your experiment. This is the place to go if you’d like assay validation data to be included in the design. 
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Who knew finding a dPCR or qPCR assay could be this easy

Who knew finding a dPCR or qPCR assay could be this easy

And dare we say fun. Try a decision tree, a wizard, or a qPCR panel finder to get to your perfect assay.
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FAQ – Digital PCR assays for DNA analysis

Can these assays detect rare DNA mutations or low-abundance variants?

By partitioning samples into many thousands of reactions, dPCR allows absolute quantification of low-abundance DNA targets. The method enables precise and reproducible measurements without relying on standard curves. Digital PCR can also detect low-abundance DNA sequences and rare mutations in a high background of non-target DNA. Compared to qPCR, the technology is less susceptible to amplification bias or inhibitors, making it suitable for complex sample matrices. Even more, dPCR supports multiplexing of more targets than qPCR.

Due to these benefits, dPCR is frequently employed for rare variant analysis or for copy number quantification in cancer and infectious diseases, as well as to quantify viral loads or microbial DNA. Digital PCR is increasingly used in the development of cell and gene therapies, to detect environmental DNA, for forensic analysis and other applications. 

 

How can I choose the right digital PCR assay for DNA quantification?

What dPCR assay you choose greatly depends on your application:
  • dPCR CNV Probe Assays for detecting gene copy number changes using probe-based detection.
  • dPCR Copy Number assays for detecting copy number variations using EvaGreen
  • dPCR LNA Mutation Assays for digital PCR for DNA mutation analysis and identifying rare point mutations
  • dPCR Microbial DNA Detection Assays for pathogen and resistance gene monitoring

What sample types can be analyzed using predesigned or customizable dPCR DNA assays?

Applicable DNA sources include genomic DNA (gDNA), circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA), circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), plasmid DNA, and microbial DNA extracted from environmental, clinical or food samples, among others. The GeneGlobe assays are suitable for dPCR cfDNA analysis and dPCR ctDNA analysis.

What are the benefits of using LNA technology in digital PCR assays?

LNA bases increase probe binding affinity and mismatch discrimination, improving detection of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and rare mutations. This technology is especially important for oncology and liquid biopsy applications.

Does GeneGlobe offer multiplex digital PCR assays for DNA targets?

The GeneGlobe assays are multiplex DNA assays, so you can carry out several mutation analysis by dPCR in parallel. For more on this topic, check out our digital PCR multiplex page.

Can I order custom DNA assays for my own target sequence?

Yes, if you’re using dPCR for CNV analysis or to detect microbial targets, we have two custom assay design tools, where you can build an assay for your region of interest in just a few clicks