Student Wiki on methodology

This Wiki is intended to collectively make the point on methodologies employed in research papers we analyze during the course. "Writers" are students who wish to contribute to a specific subject. Before contributing, please add your name in the "Writers group choice". When initiating a contribution, please indicate your name in brackets.


PLEASE:  DO NOT change the INDEX page !!!
This page contains the links to the nine official subjects, which are the same in the Choice.

To contribute, go to the correct page by clicking on the description here in the index, then click EDIT and contribute. At the end, please save.

 IMPORTANT !!!

Please do not make extensive cut-and-paste: it s useless, anybody can go to the source you use and read it.  Read the texts, digest, and make a short résumé. If you wih you can include link(s) to the source(s).

Other contributors can revise, add, erase, modify...   Please do not repeat the same text as well. 


Epigenomics: ChIP-Seq, DNase-Seq, FAIRE, ATAC-Seq, Nucleosome positioning

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Modified: 22 March 2019, 11:08 AM   User: Isabella Tarulli  → 

index

[Audrey CHAMPIER]


                                    ChIP-Seq 

Methode used to analyse the interactions between proteins and DNA.

The technique consists in a chromatin  immunoprecipitation followed by a parallel DNA  sequencing in order to identify the binding sites of one protein on DNA. ( Before it, scientists used Chip on Chip : Chromatin immunoprecipitation + sequencing with  DNA -microarray technique )


Chromatin immunoprecipitation :   ( for more details see  : " Wet-Lab portion of the workflow in the following link" :  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ChIP-on-chip#Workflow_of_a_ChIP-on-chip_experiment)

The protein of interest is first cross-linked with the  DNA site it binds,  thanks to formaldehyde for example.

Then the cells are lysed and the DNA , thanks to sonication, becomes small fragments.

After this , we introduce an antibody specific of  the protein that interests us.  This antibodies are bound to a surface and so we obtain,on this surface, all the sequence of DNA that bind the protein. In order to obtain only the DNA sequence, we reverse the cross-linking of DNA and proteins,  thanks to heat.

Sequencing:  

We use Parallel DNA sequencing method in order to obtain the sequence of all the fragments of DNA we just obtained with immunoprecipitation. 


For more informations see: 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ChIP-sequencing#ChIP


[Audrey CHAMPIER]

                                               DNase-Seq 

DNase seq is a method in biology used to identify the location of regulatory region on DNA.

For this we used DNase-I, an enzyme  ables to cleave specifics sequences ( nucleosome-depleted DNA that are easier to cleave than the other sequences). This sequences are markers of open chromatine and contains active  regulatory regions. We obtained fragments of DNA that we can purified and  sequenced ( thanks to parallel DNA sequencing methods )


Should be completed ;)


[Valentina Serra]

                                                ATAC-seq

ATAC-seq (Assay for Transposase-Accessible Chromatin using sequencing) is a technology that can be used to obtain information about genome-wide chromatin accessibility. It is an emerging technique that is gaining popularity as it aids in a fast and sensitive analysis of the epigenome compared for example to the DNase-seq technology.
This method probes DNA accessibility using the hyperactive mutant Tn5 transposase which inserts sequencing adapters into accessible regions of the chromatin. The protocol is quite simple: after the lysis of the cells, the transposase complex fragments the genome and tags the resulting DNA with sequencing adapters. The tagged DNA fragments are then purified, amplified by PCR and sent for sequencing (using the linkers, already added by the enzyme, for the library preparation). More information can be found here: https://www.abcam.com/epigenetics/epigenetics-application-spotlight-atac-seq

The advantages of this technology are:

-      the simplicity of the library preparation protocol
-      very fast
-      sonication or phenol-chloroform extraction are not required as for the FAIRE-seq; no antibodies like ChIP-seq; and no sensitive enzymatic digestion like MNase-seq or DNase-seq

The disadvantages are:
-       during the mechanical sample processing, bound chromatin regions might open and be tagged by the transposase
-       only half of the molecules contain the adapters in the orientation required for PCR amplification



[Isabella Tarulli]

                                       FAIRE-Seq

FAIRE-Seq (Formaldehyde-Assisted Isolation of Regulatory Elements) is a method used for determining the sequences of DNA regions in the genome associated with a regulatory activity. In contrast to DNase-Seq, the FAIRE-Seq protocol doesn't require the permeabilization of cells or isolation of nuclei, and can analyze any cell type. FAIRE-Seq is based on differences in crosslinking efficiencies between DNA and nucleosomes or sequence-specific DNA-binding proteins. It uses the biochemical properties of protein-bound DNA to separate nucleosome-depleted regions in the genome. The protocol is based on the fact that the formaldehyde cross-linking is more efficient in nucleosome-bound DNA than it is in nucleosome-depleted regions of the genome. Cells are subjected to cross-linking, ensuring that the interaction between the nucleosomes and DNA are fixed. After sonication, the fragmented and fixed DNA is separated using a phenol-chloroform extraction. This method creates two phases: an organic and an aqueous phase. The DNA fragments cross-linked to nucleosomes will sit in the organic phase. Nucleosome depleted or open chromatin regions will be found in the aqueous phase. This assay then extracts the non cross-linked DNA and only these nucleosome-depleted regions will be purified, enriched and sequenced. FAIRE-extracted DNA fragments can be analyzed in a high- throughput way using next-generation sequencing. Sequencing provides information for regions of DNA not occupied by histones. 

The advantages of this technology are:

-  simple and highly reproducible protocol

-  no antibodies required

-  no enzymes required, such as DNase, avoiding extra steps necessary for enzymatic processing

-  single-cell suspension or nuclear isolation not required, so the assay is easily adapted for use on tissue samples

The disadvantages are:

- No identification of regulatory proteins bound to DNA

- DNase-Seq may be better at identifying nucleosome-depleted promoters of highly expressed genes