Proteomics to study DNA-bound and chromatin-associated gene regulatory complexes

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Proteomics to study DNA-bound and chromatin-associated gene regulatory complexes. / Wierer, Michael; Mann, Matthias.

I: Human Molecular Genetics, Bind 25, Nr. R2, 01.10.2016, s. R106-R114.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Wierer, M & Mann, M 2016, 'Proteomics to study DNA-bound and chromatin-associated gene regulatory complexes', Human Molecular Genetics, bind 25, nr. R2, s. R106-R114. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddw208

APA

Wierer, M., & Mann, M. (2016). Proteomics to study DNA-bound and chromatin-associated gene regulatory complexes. Human Molecular Genetics, 25(R2), R106-R114. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddw208

Vancouver

Wierer M, Mann M. Proteomics to study DNA-bound and chromatin-associated gene regulatory complexes. Human Molecular Genetics. 2016 okt. 1;25(R2):R106-R114. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddw208

Author

Wierer, Michael ; Mann, Matthias. / Proteomics to study DNA-bound and chromatin-associated gene regulatory complexes. I: Human Molecular Genetics. 2016 ; Bind 25, Nr. R2. s. R106-R114.

Bibtex

@article{f29e55cb76cc492aa6757f7117b41a02,
title = "Proteomics to study DNA-bound and chromatin-associated gene regulatory complexes",
abstract = "High-resolution mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics is a powerful method for the identification of soluble protein complexes and large-scale affinity purification screens can decode entire protein interaction networks. In contrast, protein complexes residing on chromatin have been much more challenging, because they are difficult to purify and often of very low abundance. However, this is changing due to recent methodological and technological advances in proteomics. Proteins interacting with chromatin marks can directly be identified by pulldowns with synthesized histone tails containing posttranslational modifications (PTMs). Similarly, pulldowns with DNA baits harbouring single nucleotide polymorphisms or DNA modifications reveal the impact of those DNA alterations on the recruitment of transcription factors. Accurate quantitation - either isotope-based or label free - unambiguously pinpoints proteins that are significantly enriched over control pulldowns. In addition, protocols that combine classical chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) methods with mass spectrometry (ChIP-MS) target gene regulatory complexes in their in-vivo context. Similar to classical ChIP, cells are crosslinked with formaldehyde and chromatin sheared by sonication or nuclease digested. ChIP-MS baits can be proteins in tagged or endogenous form, histone PTMs, or lncRNAs. Locus-specific ChIP-MS methods would allow direct purification of a single genomic locus and the proteins associated with it. There, loci can be targeted either by artificial DNA-binding sites and corresponding binding proteins or via proteins with sequence specificity such as TAL or nuclease deficient Cas9 in combination with a specific guide RNA. We predict that advances in MS technology will soon make such approaches generally applicable tools in epigenetics.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Michael Wierer and Matthias Mann",
note = "{\textcopyright} The Author (2016). Published by Oxford University Press.",
year = "2016",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1093/hmg/ddw208",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "R106--R114",
journal = "Human Molecular Genetics",
issn = "0964-6906",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "R2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Proteomics to study DNA-bound and chromatin-associated gene regulatory complexes

AU - Wierer, Michael

AU - Mann, Matthias

N1 - © The Author (2016). Published by Oxford University Press.

PY - 2016/10/1

Y1 - 2016/10/1

N2 - High-resolution mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics is a powerful method for the identification of soluble protein complexes and large-scale affinity purification screens can decode entire protein interaction networks. In contrast, protein complexes residing on chromatin have been much more challenging, because they are difficult to purify and often of very low abundance. However, this is changing due to recent methodological and technological advances in proteomics. Proteins interacting with chromatin marks can directly be identified by pulldowns with synthesized histone tails containing posttranslational modifications (PTMs). Similarly, pulldowns with DNA baits harbouring single nucleotide polymorphisms or DNA modifications reveal the impact of those DNA alterations on the recruitment of transcription factors. Accurate quantitation - either isotope-based or label free - unambiguously pinpoints proteins that are significantly enriched over control pulldowns. In addition, protocols that combine classical chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) methods with mass spectrometry (ChIP-MS) target gene regulatory complexes in their in-vivo context. Similar to classical ChIP, cells are crosslinked with formaldehyde and chromatin sheared by sonication or nuclease digested. ChIP-MS baits can be proteins in tagged or endogenous form, histone PTMs, or lncRNAs. Locus-specific ChIP-MS methods would allow direct purification of a single genomic locus and the proteins associated with it. There, loci can be targeted either by artificial DNA-binding sites and corresponding binding proteins or via proteins with sequence specificity such as TAL or nuclease deficient Cas9 in combination with a specific guide RNA. We predict that advances in MS technology will soon make such approaches generally applicable tools in epigenetics.

AB - High-resolution mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics is a powerful method for the identification of soluble protein complexes and large-scale affinity purification screens can decode entire protein interaction networks. In contrast, protein complexes residing on chromatin have been much more challenging, because they are difficult to purify and often of very low abundance. However, this is changing due to recent methodological and technological advances in proteomics. Proteins interacting with chromatin marks can directly be identified by pulldowns with synthesized histone tails containing posttranslational modifications (PTMs). Similarly, pulldowns with DNA baits harbouring single nucleotide polymorphisms or DNA modifications reveal the impact of those DNA alterations on the recruitment of transcription factors. Accurate quantitation - either isotope-based or label free - unambiguously pinpoints proteins that are significantly enriched over control pulldowns. In addition, protocols that combine classical chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) methods with mass spectrometry (ChIP-MS) target gene regulatory complexes in their in-vivo context. Similar to classical ChIP, cells are crosslinked with formaldehyde and chromatin sheared by sonication or nuclease digested. ChIP-MS baits can be proteins in tagged or endogenous form, histone PTMs, or lncRNAs. Locus-specific ChIP-MS methods would allow direct purification of a single genomic locus and the proteins associated with it. There, loci can be targeted either by artificial DNA-binding sites and corresponding binding proteins or via proteins with sequence specificity such as TAL or nuclease deficient Cas9 in combination with a specific guide RNA. We predict that advances in MS technology will soon make such approaches generally applicable tools in epigenetics.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1093/hmg/ddw208

DO - 10.1093/hmg/ddw208

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27402878

VL - 25

SP - R106-R114

JO - Human Molecular Genetics

JF - Human Molecular Genetics

SN - 0964-6906

IS - R2

ER -

ID: 186876425