biological source
rabbit
Quality Level
antibody form
culture supernatant
antibody product type
primary antibodies
clone
monoclonal
species reactivity
human, vertebrates
manufacturer/tradename
Chemicon®
Upstate®
technique(s)
ChIP: suitable
dot blot: suitable
western blot: suitable
isotype
IgG
NCBI accession no.
UniProt accession no.
shipped in
wet ice
target post-translational modification
acetylation (Lys12)
Gene Information
human ... H4C1(8359)
General description
Immunogen
Application
Sonicated chromatin prepared from HeLa cells (1 X 10E6 cell equivalents per IP) were subjected to chromatin immunoprecipitation using either 2 µL of Negative Control Supernatant, or 2 µL of Anti-Acetyl-Histone H4 (Lys12) and the Magna ChIP A Kit (Cat. # 17-610).
Successful immunoprecipitation of Acetyl-Histone H4 (Lys12)-associated DNA fragments was verified by qPCR using ChIP Primers, human GAPDH Coding Region as a positive locus, and a gene desert region as a negative locus. (Figure 2). Data is presented as percent input of each IP sample relative to input chromatin for each amplicon and ChIP sample as indicated.
Please refer to the EZ-Magna ChIP A (Cat. # 17-408) or EZ-ChIP (Cat. # 17-371) protocol for experimental details.
Western Blot Analysis:
Lysates from HeLa cells untreated or sodium butyrate treated (Lanes 1 and 2 respectively) were resolved probed with anti-acetyl-Histone H4 (Lys12) (1:1,000). Arrow indicates Acetyl-Histone H4 (Lys12).
Arrow indicates Acetyl-Histone H4 (Lys12) (~11 kDa)
Epigenetics & Nuclear Function
Histones
Chromatin Biology
Biochem/physiol Actions
Physical form
Preparation Note
Analysis Note
Legal Information
Disclaimer
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Storage Class Code
12 - Non Combustible Liquids
WGK
WGK 1
Flash Point(F)
Not applicable
Flash Point(C)
Not applicable
Certificates of Analysis (COA)
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Cancer is a complex disease manifestation. At its core, it remains a disease of abnormal cellular proliferation and inappropriate gene expression. In the early days, carcinogenesis was viewed simply as resulting from a collection of genetic mutations that altered the gene expression of key oncogenic genes or tumor suppressor genes leading to uncontrolled growth and disease (Virani, S et al 2012). Today, however, research is showing that carcinogenesis results from the successive accumulation of heritable genetic and epigenetic changes. Moreover, the success in how we predict, treat and overcome cancer will likely involve not only understanding the consequences of direct genetic changes that can cause cancer, but also how the epigenetic and environmental changes cause cancer (Johnson C et al 2015; Waldmann T et al 2013). Epigenetics is the study of heritable gene expression as it relates to changes in DNA structure that are not tied to changes in DNA sequence but, instead, are tied to how the nucleic acid material is read or processed via the myriad of protein-protein, protein-nucleic acid, and nucleic acid-nucleic acid interactions that ultimately manifest themselves into a specific expression phenotype (Ngai SC et al 2012, Johnson C et al 2015). This review will discuss some of the principal aspects of epigenetic research and how they relate to our current understanding of carcinogenesis. Because epigenetics affects phenotype and changes in epigenetics are thought to be key to environmental adaptability and thus may in fact be reversed or manipulated, understanding the integration of experimental and epidemiologic science surrounding cancer and its many manifestations should lead to more effective cancer prognostics as well as treatments (Virani S et al 2012).
Global Trade Item Number
| SKU | GTIN |
|---|---|
| 04-119 | 04053252336171 |
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