Chromatin Immunoprecipitation (ChIP)
What is CHIP?
❑ ChIP is a method to investigate protein-DNA interaction in vivo.❑ The output of ChIP is enriched fragments of DNA that were bound by a particular protein.
❑ The identity of DNA fragments need to be further determined by a second method.
❑DNA is the information carrier of almost all living organisms.
❑Protein is the major building block of life.
❑Interaction between DNA and protein play vital roles in the development
and normal function of living organisms, and disease if something goes
wrong.
❑An important mechanism of protein-DNA interaction is via direct binding,
i.e., a protein binds to a particular fragment of the DNA.
Binding of DNA with protein
DNA binds with specific proteins such as:❑ Transcription factors
❑ Modified histones
❑ RNA Polymerase (survey actively transcribe portions of the genome)
❑ DNA polymerase (investigate DNA replication)
❑ DNA repair enzymes
❑ Or fragments of DNA that are modified: e.g. CpG methylation
How does ChIP work?
The ChIP procedure consists of the following steps:
1.Isolation of total chromatin
2.Fragmentation of the chromatin (to achieve resolution)
3.Immunoprecipitation of the resulting chromatin fragments
4.Analysis of the immunoprecipitated fraction to determine the amount of a target DNA sequence (or sequences) relative to its abundance in the input chromatin.
If you cross-link your sample then the technique is termed cross linking ChiP (X-ChIP), otherwise it is referred to as native ChIP (N-ChIP).
Principal of ChIP |
2 comments:
Very good work 👌.You give details in short.
Great work
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