μChIP—a rapid micro chromatin immunoprecipitation assay for small cell samples and biopsies

JA Dahl, P Collas - Nucleic acids research, 2008 - academic.oup.com
Nucleic acids research, 2008academic.oup.com
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) is a powerful technique for studying protein–DNA
interactions. Drawbacks of current ChIP assays however are a requirement for large cell
numbers, which limits applicability of ChIP to rare cell samples, and/or lengthy procedures
with limited applications. There are to date no protocols for fast and parallel ChIPs of post-
translationally modified histones from small cell numbers or biopsies, and importantly, no
protocol allowing for investigations of transcription factor binding in small cell numbers. We …
Abstract
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) is a powerful technique for studying protein–DNA interactions. Drawbacks of current ChIP assays however are a requirement for large cell numbers, which limits applicability of ChIP to rare cell samples, and/or lengthy procedures with limited applications. There are to date no protocols for fast and parallel ChIPs of post-translationally modified histones from small cell numbers or biopsies, and importantly, no protocol allowing for investigations of transcription factor binding in small cell numbers. We report here the development of a micro (μ) ChIP assay suitable for up to nine parallel quantitative ChIPs of modified histones or RNA polymerase II from a single batch of 1000 cells. μChIP can also be downscaled to monitor the association of one protein with multiple genomic sites in as few as 100 cells. μChIP is applicable to small fresh tissue biopsies, and a cross-link-while-thawing procedure makes the assay suitable for frozen biopsies. Using μChIP, we characterize transcriptionally permissive and repressive histone H3 modifications on developmentally regulated promoters in human embryonal carcinoma cells and in osteosarcoma biopsies. μChIP creates possibilities for multiple parallel and rapid transcription factor binding and epigenetic analyses of rare cell and tissue samples.
Oxford University Press