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Merck

17-10523

EZ-Magna NuCLEAR RIP (Native) Nuclear RNA-Binding Protein Immunoprecipitation Kit

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About This Item

UNSPSC Code:
41105331
NACRES:
NA.84

Quality Level

General description

Magna Nuclear RIP Kits are specially designed to allow the discovery and analysis of a variety of chromatin associated RNAs such as long non-coding RNAs, enhancer RNAs and miRNAs . These chromatin-associated RNAs often regulate gene expression and can be analyzed with applications including quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), microarray analysis (RIP-chip) and next generation sequencing (RIP-Seq).

Nuclear RIP can be performed using chromatin that has interactions stabilized by formaldehyde treatment (cross-linked) or chromatin that has not been treated with a cross linking reagent (native). While both of these approaches are similar in that they are designed to recover chromatin associated RNA, the reagents used and the details of the protocol and types of interactions typically detected are different. Native RIP is expected to recover high affinity, more direct interactions between proteins encoded RNA binding motifs and candidate RNAs. In contrast, nuclear RIP with cross-linked chromatin can capture higher molecular weight complexes in in vivo configurations with possibly lower affinities. For less well understood proteins and protein complexes often both approaches are used.

Application

EZ-Magna Nuclear RIP (Native) RNA-Binding Protein Immunoprecipitation Kit is designed for the analysis of chromatin associated RNA such lncRNAs, enhancer RNAs and miRNAs.

Packaging

Kit capacity: 24 RNA-binding protein immunoprecipitation assays using a native (non-cross-linked) nuclear lysate

Other Notes

Nuclei Isolation Buffer ;RIP Lysis Buffer;Protein A/G Magnetic Beads;RIP Lysis Buffer;0.5M EDTA;DNase I (RNase Free) 2 U/μL;DNase I Reaction Buffer ;Protease Inhibitor Cocktail III, Animal Free;RNAse Inhibitor;Control Antibodies and PrimersNormal Mouse IgG Negative Control Antibody;Anti-EZH2 Positive Control Antibody ;NEAT1 Positive Control Primers ;U1 snRNA Negative Control Primers

Legal Information

NuCLEAR is a trademark of Sigma-Aldrich Co. LLC

Disclaimer

Unless otherwise stated in our catalog or other company documentation accompanying the product(s), our products are intended for research use only and are not to be used for any other purpose, which includes but is not limited to, unauthorized commercial uses, in vitro diagnostic uses, ex vivo or in vivo therapeutic uses or any type of consumption or application to humans or animals.

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Hazard Statements

Hazard Classifications

Aquatic Chronic 3 - Eye Irrit. 2 - Skin Irrit. 2

Storage Class Code

10 - Combustible liquids

WGK

WGK 3


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Related Content

"Gene regulation plays a critical role in complex cellular processes such as development, differentiation, and cellular response to environmental changes. While the regulation of gene expression by transcription factors and epigenetic influences has been well studied over time, pervasive genomic transcription and the role of non-coding RNAs in this process is a rapidly evolving field that remains to be thoroughly explored. Chromatin is typically thought of as a complex of DNA, histones, and non-histone proteins, and RNA. Historically, mRNA was considered to be the only RNA associated with chromatin. These mRNAs would transiently associate with chromatin during transcription then exit the nucleus for translation. However, mounting evidence suggests that various classes of non-coding RNAs (e.g. long non-coding RNAs (lncRNA) small nuclear RNAs (snRNA), enhancer RNAs (eRNA) etc.) are associated with chromatin and likely serve regulatory functions1-3. For the past several years chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) has been used to interrogate association of proteins with genomic DNA sequences. The need to better understand the RNA component of chromatin has driven the development of additional methods to allow analysis and characterization of chromatin associated RNA. One approach used to detect and identify RNA molecules that interact with a specific protein is RNAbinding protein immunoprecipitation (RIP)4. This method allows the immunoprecipitation of protein:RNA complexes that are both nuclear and cytoplasmic using whole cell lysates generated using kit such as the Magna RIP™ RNA Binding Protein Immunoprecipitation Kit."

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

SKUGTIN
17-1052304055977127386

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