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H3K27Me3 CHIP grade antibody


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  • Native chromatin immunoprecipitation (N-ChIP) and ChIP-Seq of Schistosoma mansoni: Critical experimental parameters. 19428675

    Histone modifications are important epigenetic marks that influence chromatin structure and consequently play a role in the control of eukaryotic transcription. Several histone modifying enzymes have been characterized in Schistosoma mansoni and it has been suggested that the regulation of gene transcription in schistosomes may require the action of these enzymes. However, the influence of chromatin structure on gene transcription in schistosomes has never been investigated. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) is the technique of choice to study the relationship between histone modifications and gene expression. Although this technique has been widely used with cultured cells from model organisms and with many unicellular organisms, it remains challenging to apply this technique to non-conventional organisms that undergo complex life cycles. In this work, we describe a native ChIP procedure that is applicable to all the stages of the S. mansoni life cycle and does not require expensive equipment. Immunoprecipitated DNA was analysed on a whole-genome scale using massively parallel sequencing (ChIP-Sequencing or ChIP-Seq). We show that ChIP-Seq and conventional quantitative PCR deliver comparable results for a life-cycle regulated locus, smRHO, that encodes a guanine-protein coupled receptor. This is the first time that the ChIP-Seq procedure has been applied to a parasite. This technique opens new ways for analyzing epigenetic mechanisms in S. mansoni at a whole-genome scale and on the level of individual loci.
    Document Type:
    Reference
    Product Catalog Number:
    07-352
    Product Catalog Name:
    Anti-acetyl-Histone H3 (Lys9) Antibody
  • ChIP (chromatin immunoprecipitation) analysis demonstrates co-ordinated binding of two transcription factors to the promoter of the p53 tumour-suppressor gene. 20446924

    p53 is a tumour-suppressor protein that plays a role in many cellular processes, including regulation of the cell cycle, DNA repair, transcriptional regulation of genes, chromosomal segregation, cell senescence and apoptosis. The protein's role as a transcription factor has shown that deregulated transcription, whether increased or decreased, has the potential to contribute to the formation of human cancers. It was previously reported that binding of two transcription factors, C/EBPbeta and RBP-Jkappa, to a regulatory site on the p53 promoter regulates its activity, in vitro, in a cell cycle-dependent manner. C/EBPbeta is a CCAAT enhancer-binding protein that is a member of the basic leucine zipper transcription factor (bZIP) family that plays an important role in mediating cell proliferation, differentiation and can also be involved in inflammatory responses, metabolism, cellular transformation, oncogene-induced senescence and tumorigenesis. RBP-Jkappa participates in the transcriptional regulation of target genes by interacting with the cytoplasmic domain of the Notch receptors. When RBP-Jkappa is released, transcriptional repression of its target genes occurs through the recruitment of co-repressor complexes and prevents transcription from occurring. Our reports, here and previously published, show that repression of p53 by RBP-Jkappa and activation of p53 by C/EBPbeta through differential binding of these two factors indicates a type of co-operative regulation in p53 expression. Here, we demonstrate through the use of chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays that the co-ordinated binding of these two factors to the p53 promoter occurs in vivo and serves to regulate p53's activity during the cell cycle.
    Document Type:
    Reference
    Product Catalog Number:
    AB5790
    Product Catalog Name:
    Anti-RBP-Jk Antibody