In vivo analysis of DNA methylation patterns recognized by specific proteins: coupling ChIP and bisulfite analysis

The three-way connection between DNA methylation, chromatin configuration, and transcriptional regulation is under increasing attention, but the fine rules governing the epi-genetic control are still poorly understood. In several studies, the authors have concluded that the methylation status of CpG...

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Veröffentlicht in:BioTechniques 2004-10, Vol.37 (4), p.666-673
Hauptverfasser: Matarazzo, Maria Rosaria, Lembo, Francesca, Angrisano, Tiziana, Ballestar, Esteban, Ferraro, Marcella, Pero, Raffaela, De Bonis, Maria Luigia, Bruni, Carmelo Bruno, Esteller, Manel, D'Esposito, Maurizio, Chiariotti, Lorenzo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The three-way connection between DNA methylation, chromatin configuration, and transcriptional regulation is under increasing attention, but the fine rules governing the epi-genetic control are still poorly understood. In several studies, the authors have concluded that the methylation status of CpG sites could be critical for the binding of factors to DNA and, consequently, for chromatin conformation. We tested the possibility that a novel technical approach combining chromatin immunoprecipitation and bisulfite genomic sequencing analysis (ChIP-BA) could provide useful information on the role of specific CpG methylation patterns in driving the association in vivo of proteins to given genomic regions. Our results show that ChIP-BA permits the establishment in vivo of the methylation patterns required for the binding of a methyl-CpG binding protein and, in addition, can potentially identify methylation patterns that do not allow a protein to bind specific genomic regions. Possible fields of application are discussed. We believe that wide use of ChIP-BA could make possible the exploration of a novel aspect of the intricate epigenetic web.
ISSN:0736-6205
1940-9818
DOI:10.2144/04374DD02