PUB-NChIP-"in vivo biotinylation" approach to study chromatin in proximity to a protein of interest

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Abstract

We have developed an approach termed PUB-NChIP (proximity utilizing biotinylation with native ChIP) to purify and study the protein composition of chromatin in proximity to a nuclear protein of interest. It is based on coexpression of (1) a protein of interest, fused with the bacterial biotin ligase BirA, together with (2) a histone fused to a biotin acceptor peptide (BAP), which is specifically biotinylated by BirA-fusion in the proximity of the protein of interest. Using the RAD18 protein as a model, we demonstrate that the RAD18-proximal chromatin is enriched in some H4 acetylated species. Moreover, the RAD18-proximal chromatin containing a replacement histone H2AZ has a different pattern of H4 acetylation. Finally, biotin pulse-chase experiments show that the H4 acetylation pattern starts to resemble the acetylation pattern of total H4 after the proximity of chromatin to RAD18 has been lost. © 2013, Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.

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Shoaib, M., Kulyyassov, A., Robin, C., Winczura, K., Tarlykov, P., Despas, E., … Ogryzko, V. (2013). PUB-NChIP-"in vivo biotinylation" approach to study chromatin in proximity to a protein of interest. Genome Research, 23(2), 331–340. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.134874.111

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