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Epigenetics and Nuclear Signaling Assays & Kits ChIP Related Products
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ChIP Kit - One Step (ab117138)

  • Datasheet
  • SDS
  • Protocol Booklet
Submit a review Q&A (18)References (9)

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ChIP - ChIP Kit - One Step (ab117138)
  • ChIP - ChIP Kit - One Step (ab117138)

Key features and details

  • Assay type: Quantitative
  • Assay time: 5 hr

You may also be interested in

ChIP
Product image
Chromatin Extraction Kit (ab117152)
Biochemical
Product image
RGFP 966, HDAC3 inhibitor (ab144819)
Primary
Product image
Anti-Histone H3 (tri methyl K9) antibody - ChIP Grade (ab8898)

View more associated products

Overview

  • Product name

    ChIP Kit - One Step
    See all ChIP Kit kits
  • Assay type

    Quantitative
  • Assay time

    5h 00m
  • Product overview

    Abcam's ChIP Kit - One Step (ab117138) enables the user to enrich a chromatin fraction containing specific DNA sequences from isolated chromatin to be able to investigate the interaction between proteins and DNA. For best result, we recommend the use of Chromatin Extraction Kit (ab117152) for sample preparation.


    Protein-DNA interactions play a critical role for cellular functions such as signal transduction, gene transcription and epigenetic silencing. In mammalian cells, interactions between the DNA-binding proteins and cognate promoter sequences are primary determinants in establishing spatial and temporal expression patterns of gene that affect homeostasis, development, and adaptation.

  • Notes

    Primers

    The GAPDH primers provided with the kit are for the human sequence. If using the kit with a difference species, GAPDH primers for that species will need to be acquired.

    If additional control primers are needed, they are available for purchase as ab171517 (reverse primer) and ab171518 (forward primer).

    ChIP assay products and guides

    Find more ChIP assay / chromatin immunoprecipitation resources and products, ChIP antibody products, and other ChIP assay kits and related reagents.

  • Tested applications

    Suitable for: ChIPmore details

Properties

  • Storage instructions

    Store at +4°C. Please refer to protocols.
  • Components Identifier 48 tests 96 tests
    10X Wash Buffer 1 x 10ml 1 x 20ml
    8-Well Assay Strips (with Frame) 6 units 12 units
    8-Well Strip Caps 6 units 12 units
    96-Well PCR Plate 1 unit 1 unit
    Adhesive Covering Film 1 unit 2 units
    Anti-RNA Polymerase II (1 mg/ml) 1 x 8µl 1 x 16µl
    ChIP Buffer 1 x 6ml 1 x 12ml
    DNA Release Buffer ECP3 1 x 14ml 1 x 28ml
    GAPDH Primer - Forward (20 µM) 1 x 8µl 1 x 16µl
    GAPDH Primer - Reverse (20 µM) 1 x 8µl 1 x 16µl
    Non-Immune IgG (1 mg/ml) 1 x 10µl 1 x 20µl
    Proteinase K (10 mg/mL) 1 x 55µl 1 x 110µl
    Sonication Frame 1 unit 1 unit
  • Research areas

    • Epigenetics and Nuclear Signaling
    • Assays & Kits
    • ChIP Related Products
    • Kits/ Lysates/ Other
    • Kits
    • Epigenetic kits
    • ChIP Kits
    • Epigenetics and Nuclear Signaling
    • ChIP assays
    • ChIP kits

Associated products

  • sELISA pair antibody

    • Chromatin Extraction Kit (ab117152)

Applications

The Abpromise guarantee

Our Abpromise guarantee covers the use of ab117138 in the following tested applications.

The application notes include recommended starting dilutions; optimal dilutions/concentrations should be determined by the end user.

Application Abreviews Notes
ChIP
Use at an assay dependent concentration.

The GAPDH primers provided with the kit are for the human sequence. If using the kit with a different species, GAPDH primers for that species will need to be acquired.

Notes
ChIP
Use at an assay dependent concentration.

The GAPDH primers provided with the kit are for the human sequence. If using the kit with a different species, GAPDH primers for that species will need to be acquired.

Images

  • ChIP - ChIP Kit - One Step (ab117138)
    ChIP - ChIP Kit - One Step (ab117138)

    Chromatin was prepared from HeLa cells following Abcam's X-ChIP protocol. Cells were fixed with formaldehyde for 10 minutes. ChIP was performed with ab8580 (Histone H3 tri-methyl K4) using ab117138. No antibody was added to the blank (yellow). The immunoprecipitated DNA was quantified by real time PCR (Taqman approach). Primes and probes are located in the first Kb of the transcribed region.

  • ChIP - ChIP Kit - One Step (ab117138)
    ChIP - ChIP Kit - One Step (ab117138)

    The analysis of enrichment of RNA polymerase II in GAPDH and MLH1 promoters by Abcam's ChIP Kit - One Step, with chromatin extract prepared from formaldehyde fixed colon cancer cells. Captured DNA was used for analyzing levels of RNA polymerase II enriched in the GAPDH and MLH1 promoters.

Protocols

  • Protocol Booklet

Click here to view the general protocols

Datasheets and documents

  • SDS download

  • Datasheet download

    Download

References (9)

Publishing research using ab117138? Please let us know so that we can cite the reference in this datasheet.

ab117138 has been referenced in 9 publications.

  • Houshdaran S  et al. Steroid hormones regulate genome-wide epigenetic programming and gene transcription in human endometrial cells with marked aberrancies in endometriosis. PLoS Genet 16:e1008601 (2020). PubMed: 32555663
  • Chen XS  et al. UCH-L1-mediated Down-regulation of Estrogen Receptor a Contributes to Insensitivity to Endocrine Therapy for Breast Cancer. Theranostics 10:1833-1848 (2020). PubMed: 32042339
  • Assaf S  et al. ST18 affects cell-cell adhesion in pemphigus vulgaris in a tumour necrosis factor-a-dependent fashion. Br J Dermatol N/A:N/A (2020). PubMed: 33205400
  • Munkley J  et al. Androgen-regulated transcription of ESRP2 drives alternative splicing patterns in prostate cancer. Elife 8:N/A (2019). PubMed: 31478829
  • Brayer S  et al. The pro-apoptotic BAX protein influences cell growth and differentiation from the nucleus in healthy interphasic cells. Cell Cycle 16:2108-2118 (2017). PubMed: 28933587
  • Lu R  et al. COPS5 amplification and overexpression confers tamoxifen-resistance in ERa-positive breast cancer by degradation of NCoR. Nat Commun 7:12044 (2016). ChIP ; Human . PubMed: 27375289
  • Mercado-Pimentel ME  et al. The S100P/RAGE signaling pathway regulates expression of microRNA-21 in colon cancer cells. FEBS Lett 589:2388-93 (2015). Functional Studies ; Rat . PubMed: 26193421
  • Yao X  et al. TLE1 promotes EMT in A549 lung cancer cells through suppression of E-cadherin. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 455:277-84 (2014). ChIP ; Human . PubMed: 25446087
  • Onyeagucha BC  et al. S100P/RAGE signaling regulates microRNA-155 expression via AP-1 activation in colon cancer. Exp Cell Res 319:2081-90 (2013). ChIP ; Human . PubMed: 23693020

Customer reviews and Q&As

Show All Reviews Q&A
Submit a review Submit a question

1-10 of 18 Abreviews or Q&A

Question

question sur ab117138

Read More

Abcam community

Verified customer

Asked on Jan 23 2014

Answer

la concentration de la chromatine peut être mesurée par Bradford ou par un assai BCA.

Notez que nous recommandons d’utiliser entre 5-10 ug de chromatine ce qui correspond à ˜ 0.5 to 1 x 10^6 cellules (la chromatine est généralement composée d’histones et d’ADN dans un ratio d’environ 2:1.)

Read More

Elisa Thomas

Abcam Scientific Support

Answered on Jan 23 2014

Question

1. How does well capture chromatin / antibody (which does it bind to)
2. Can multiple antibodies be used in the same well?

Read More

Abcam community

Verified customer

Asked on Feb 20 2013

Answer

The wells of ab117138 are coated with protein A/G to bind to the antibody(s) that you use. Multiple antibodies can be used in the same well. However, multiple targeted proteins will be captured, which may make the downstream application and analysis difficult. The best way is to use one antibody for one well in order to gain more specific information regarding which proteins are associated with certain DNA sequences.

Read More

Abcam Scientific Support

Answered on Feb 20 2013

Question

The Sonicator I use is Bioruptor UCD-200, a water bath based sonicator. I tried to use it so sonicate pure genomic DNA, by 10 cycles (30 sec on/30 sec off) it became 200 to 1000 bp size. When I sonicated chromatin, after 20 cycles, it became 1k to 3k. With more sonication up to 90 cycles, the size was still 1k to 3k. The size is based on the sonicated chromatin directly run in 1% agarose gel. Someone suggested that chromatin may migrate in the gel differently from pure DNA. I tried to purify DNA with Zymo’s DNA Clean and Concentrition column directly from sonicated chromatin or after treatment (boil, Proteinase K), but failed to get DNA back. The column works when I use pure DNA. Maybe the buffer of the chromatin interferes with DNA’s binding to the column. Now my question is, when you check the size of the chromatin after sonication, do you run it directly in agarose gel? If you purify the DNA at this step, what method do you use? Thanks! Yongzhi Geng > > > "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> > > >     >     >     href="https://www.abcam.com/assets/css/campaign.css" type="text/css"> > > > > > body { > margin: 0px; > margin-top: 10px; > font-family: arial, verdana, tahoma; > background-color: #F5F5EE; > > > p{ > padding-top: 4px; > margin: 0px; > line-height: 18px; > > body table{ > font-size: 12px; > line-height: 100%; > > > a { > text-decoration: underline; > color: #004a91; > > a:visited { > color: #0096db; > > a:hover { > color: #0096db; > text-decoration: underline; > > .mainText { > margin-left: 0cm; > font-weight: normal; > margin-left: 10px; > > .tagLine { > margin-left: 0cm; > font-weight: normal; > margin-left: 10px; > color: #FFFFFF; > > .tagLine a { > margin-left: 0cm; > font-weight: normal; > text-decoration: none; > color: #FFFFFF; > > .tagLink { > margin-left: 0cm; > font-weight: normal; > text-decoration: none; > color: #FFFFFF; > font-weight: bold; > > .salutation{ > margin-left: 0cm; > padding-bottom: 10px; > font-weight: bold; > margin-left: 10px; > > > > > > bgcolor="#F5F5EE" align="center" margin="0" style="table-layout:fixed"> > > > > > > bgcolor="#FFFFFF" border="0" style="margin-top: 5px; border: 1px solid > #BBB;" align="center"> > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > href="https://www.abcam.com/index.html? utm_campaign=CRM&utm_source=Abcam.CRM&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=Header"> src="https://www.abcam.com/ps/cms/emails/CRM-Header.jpg" width="600" > height="141" border="0" alt="abcam: discover more" > > > > > > > > >normal; margin-left: 10px;">Dear Yongzhi >normal; margin-left: 10px;">    >>  > Thank you for > contacting us. > > >> I have had the > opportunity to discuss your question with the lab. In general, the > chromatin is easy to be sonicated to 200-1000 bps. If the chromatin > extracts can not be broken down fully by sonication, it may be due to > insufficient time length, power intensity, foaming of chromatin solution > during sonication etc. these sonicatio parameters may need to be > optimized based on the sonicator type before ChIP. for the best sonication > results, we recommend to use water-bath-based sonicators such as Episonic > 1100 or covaris, with the established chromatin shearing > protocol. >>   >> DNA purification > is not required before ChIP.  Cleaned up and eluted DNA after ChIP can > be directly used for PCR. However for microarray or sequencing use, > the DNA should be further purified as indicated in the user > guide. > >> I hope this > information is helpful to you. Please do not hesitate to contact us if you > need any more advice or information. > >   Help us improve our service. href="https://www.abcam.com/index.html? pageConfig=technicalSurvey&intCCEID=4649811">Rate > your experience with us today.   >  >Best regards, > Keith > > Keith Beadle > Scientific Support Specialist > Abcam Inc. > www.abcam.com > >  >   >  >Your original inquiry to Abcam: >>> Customer kindly contacted us as they have found that their chromotin > extract may not be breaking down fully with sonication. They ask if, after > sonicating, is DNA purification required to perform ChIP using this kit? If > so, how do we recommend purifying? Do we have any ideas as to why the DNA > is not breaking by sonication and are there any step that they may take to > rememdy this issue? >   > > >normal; margin-left: 10px;">[CCE4649811] > > SID:42 > > > >normal; margin-left: 10px; color: #FFFFFF;">Discover > more at abcam.com > > > > > > > > Yongzhi Geng 530-752-6715 Rm 6404A GBSF, Clinical Nutrition UC Davis

Read More

Abcam community

Verified customer

Asked on Feb 20 2013

Answer

The size can be checked by directly running the sheared chromatin as seen in the attached file. If DNA will be purified. The following quick method may be useful: a) Use 10 uL sample and add 40 uL H2O b) Reverse cross-link by adding 2 uL of 5 M NaCl (Final concentration 0.2 M NaCl) c) Boil for 15 minutes d) After returning to room temperature, add 1 uL of 10 mg/ml RNase A at 37 °C for 10 mins e) Clean and purify DNA with PCR Clean-Up Kit, f) Load 1 and 4 uL of sonicated DNA on gel and determine size of smear g) The sonication condition that gives a smear of DNA sizes from 200 bp to 1 kb with a peak around 500 bp (2-3 nucleosomes) should be used for ChIP reactions. I hope this information is helpful to you. Please do not hesitate to contact us if you need any more advice or information.

Read More

Abcam Scientific Support

Answered on Feb 20 2013

Question

Customer kindly contacted us as they have found that their chromotin extract may not be breaking down fully with sonication. They ask if, after sonicating, is DNA purification required to perform ChIP usiong this kit? If so, how do we recommend purifying? Do we have any ideas as to why the DNA is not breaking by sonication and are there any step that they may take to rememdy this issue?

Read More

Abcam community

Verified customer

Asked on Feb 12 2013

Answer

In general, the chromatin is easy to be sonicated to 200-1000 bps. If the chromatin extracts can not be broken down fully by sonication, it may be due to insufficient time length, power intensity, foaming of chromatin solution during sonication etc. these sonicatio parameters may need to be optimized based on the sonicator type before ChIP. for the best sonication results, we recommend to use water-bath-based sonicators such as Episonic 1100 or covaris, with the established chromatin shearing protocol. DNA purification is not required before ChIP. Cleaned up and eluted DNA after ChIP can be directly used for PCR. However for microarray or sequencing use, the DNA should be further purified as indicated in the user guide.

Read More

Abcam Scientific Support

Answered on Feb 12 2013

Question

mouse tested?
can primers be used for mouse GAPDH?

Read More

Abcam community

Verified customer

Asked on Jan 11 2013

Answer


1. We tested this kit with human samples, but it should also work fine with mouse samples.

2. the primers included in the kit is only for human GAPDH. The following are the suggested primers specific for mouse GAPDH:


F: 5'-TGGAACAGGGAGGAGCAGAGAGCA-3
R: 5'-TACTCGCGGCTTTACGGG-3'

Mouse has been predicted to react, but not yet been tested.

Read More

Abcam Scientific Support

Answered on Jan 11 2013

Question

1)Are the strips in the two kits the same?
2) How do you determine the concentration of chromatin? It seems to me that the measurement of 260/280 would not be accurate since you would be measuring from cell extract and not purified DNA.
3) Why do you spin down in column for one kit and not the ab117138?

Read More

Abcam community

Verified customer

Asked on Dec 20 2012

Answer

Hello and I apologize for the late reply.

1. The strips are the same for the two
kits.
2. The concentration of chromatin can be measured by
regular protein quantification methods. Histone protein :DNA ratio is
about 2:1.
3. The DNA release buffers are different in these two
kits. the DNA in CP5 of ab11744 requires to be further purified in column and DNA
released from CH3 does not need to be clean up for PCR, which enables ChIP with
the kit ab117138 to be much faster.

Please
let me know if you have any further questions.

Read More

Abcam Scientific Support

Answered on Dec 20 2012

Question

Bonjour,

J'ai une nouvelle question concernant le ChIP kit -one step ab117138 : est-il possible de savoir quel type d'anticorps anti-Pol II est fourni ? Est-ce un anticorps reconnaissant toutes les formes de la polymérase ou seulement une forme active phosphorylée ?

Bien cordialement,

Read More

Abcam community

Verified customer

Asked on Sep 03 2012

Answer



L'anti-RNA pol II fournie dans le kit ab117138 est un monoclonal de souris, clone [CTD4H8] qui reconnait la partie C-terminale de toutes les formes de la polymerase (phosphorylée et non-phosphorylée).

J'espère que ces informations vous seront utiles. N'hésitez pas à nous contacter de nouveau si vous avez d'autres questions.

Read More

Abcam Scientific Support

Answered on Sep 03 2012

Question

Thank you for you reply. I got a band about 120kD yesterday. Seem to be PHF8, I stiil have one more question. Will cross-linking pocedure interfere the IP? Will the antibody recognition sites be blocked by cross-linking? How to decide N-ChIP or X-ChIP?

Read More

Abcam community

Verified customer

Asked on Jul 31 2012

Answer

Thank you for your reply. I am glad to hear your are able to get the correct band.

Cross linking should not interfere with the IP; however cross-linking is a time-critical procedure. Cross-linking should generally only be carried out for a few minutes. Excessive cross-linking can lead to a decrease in the amount of protein bound to the DNA, reduction in the availability of epitopes/changes in epitopes for antibody binding and, in turn, reductions in the material bound/antigen availability in your sample.It is recommended to always perform a time-course experiment to optimize cross-linking conditions.



There are a number of advantages and disadvantages to both procedures our ChIP tips page details these as well as answers to a number of common ChIP questions. That page is located athttps://www.abcam.com/index.html?pageconfig=resource&rid=310


I hope this information is helpful to you. Please do not hesitate to contact us if you need any more advice or information.

Use our products? Submit an Abreview. Earn rewards!
https://www.abcam.com/abreviews

Read More

Abcam Scientific Support

Answered on Jul 31 2012

Question

I am using ChIP to detect the PHF8 combination position on Satb2 gene in mouse MC3T3 cells. The ChIP kit is from Millipore. After several times of failure, I adopted Western blot to test the IP effiency. The cells (non-crosslinked) were lysised with RIPA with protease inhibitor and sonicated to further release nuclear proteins. Then 600ul cell lysis from a 100mm plate was incubated with 1ug PHF8 antibody at 4 overnight, the A/G beads from Millipore kit were added and incubated for 2 hours on the second day. Beads were washed by PBS for 3 times, and eluted by elution buffer. We collected the elution after IP, the supernatant after beads incubation, and the cell lysis as input. All above samples were included in a Western blot. It turns out that in Input and Supernatant samples, there are a band about 111kD, but no band in elution lane. Is the 111kD band PHF8? Can this antibody for human PHF8 be used for immunocipitate protein in mouse cells? What is the immunogen of this antibody? Can it recognize mouse PHF8? How many kD should the mouse PHF8 be on a Western membrane? Do we need to pretreat the protein to expose the antibody recognization sites? What's the efficient condition you suggest to do the immunoprecipiataion? Thanks.

Read More

Abcam community

Verified customer

Asked on Jul 27 2012

Answer

Thank you for contacting us. I am sorry to hear that you have been experiencing issues when in ChIP using this product. According to the Uniprot information for this protein (http://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/Q80TJ7)this product may recognize the ~114 kDa Isoform 1 or the 89 kDa Isoform 2 of PHF8 in mouse. These figures are based on sequence and may not reflect actual size in real world experiments; however this does align with the 111 kDa bands which you have been seeing. While this product has been predicted to work in mouse based on sequence homology, to our knowledge this has not been tested before. I have run a BLAST of the immunogen sequence against mouse with the following result: gi|123285641|emb|CAM17163.1| PHD finger protein 8 [Mus musculus] Length=820 GENE ID: 320595 Phf8 | PHD finger protein 8 [Mus musculus] Score = 46.9 bits (103), Expect = 4e-05, Method: Composition-based stats. Identities = 13/14 (93%), Positives = 13/14 (93%), Gaps = 0/14 (0%) Have you attempted an x-ChIP protocol? We do have a customer review using this antibody in X-ChIP on human cells which you may find under the Abreview tab of the datasheet on the website. X-ChIP may be more suitable when analyzing proteins that have either a weaker DNA affinity or are a long way from DNA. Cross-linking may be required to stop proteins dissociating from the DNA. Histones are tightly associated therefore N-ChIP can be performed when studying histones. It is also possible that there is not enough antibody included in the immunoprecipitation.We would suggest using between 3-5 μg of antibody in the first instance. This could be increased to 10ug if no signal is observed. I have also included our ChIP protocols for your review. We also offer our EpiSeeker One Step ChIP kit which is guaranteed to work in mouse. More information about our EpiSeeker kits and line may be found at these links: https://www.abcam.com/EpiSeeker-ChIP-Kit-One-Step-ab117138.html https://www.abcam.com/index.html?pageconfig=resource&rid=14469 I hope this information is helpful to you. Please do not hesitate to contact us if you need any more advice or information. Use our products? Submit an Abreview. Earn rewards! https://www.abcam.com/abreviews

Read More

Abcam Scientific Support

Answered on Jul 27 2012

Question

Hi there,

I have a customer who is interested in purchasing the ChIP kit (ab500), however he uses a goat polyclonal antibody, and thus needs Protein G beads. Does Abcam offer substitute Protein G beads for the ChIP kit, or do you have any recommendations for Protein G beads for use in this kit?

I look forward to your response.

Much appreciation,

Read More

Abcam community

Verified customer

Asked on Jul 24 2012

Answer

Thank you for contacting us and your interest in our products.

The ChIP kit which your customer is interested in used the protein A beads for isolation and would therefore not be suitable for use with a goat polyclonal antibody. We do however have a different kit that the customer may be interested in. This is the EpiSeeker ChIP Kit - One Step (ab117138). This kit uses a mixture of protein A and G for the immunecapture and would therefore be suitable to use with the goat polyclonal antibody.

I would advise the customer have a look at this kit to see if they think this is suitable for their needs.

I am sorry that I could not be of more help in this instance. If you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to ask

Read More

Abcam Scientific Support

Answered on Jul 24 2012

1-10 of 18 Abreviews or Q&A

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