English edit

Etymology edit

mis- +‎ prime

Verb edit

misprime (third-person singular simple present misprimes, present participle mispriming, simple past and past participle misprimed)

  1. To prime incorrectly.
    • 2007, Ralph Rapley, John M. Walker, Molecular Biomethods Handbook, page 310:
      It is also useful when using degenerate primers which may misprime and cause nonspecific products.
    • 2010, Stephen A. Bustin, The PCR Revolution: Basic Technologies and Applications, page 139:
      As described previously, primers are apt to dimerize or misprime, particularly in the absence of specific target.
    • 2013, Stuart LeGrice, Matthias Gotte, Human Immunodeficiency Virus Reverse Transcriptase, page 208:
      Aberrant annealing has also been observed — either due to the use of the incorrect tRNA to misprime reverse transcription (Colicelli and Goff 1986a, b; Wakefield et al. 1995) or due to the priming of cellular mRNAs with short “tRNA-like” primers (Taylor and Cywinski 1984).