1. Academic Validation
  2. ChIP on Chip: surprising results are often artifacts

ChIP on Chip: surprising results are often artifacts

  • BMC Genomics. 2010 Jul 5;11:414. doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-11-414.
Torsten Waldminghaus 1 Kirsten Skarstad
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Cell Biology, Institute for Cancer Research, The Norwegian Radium Hospital, Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, 0310 Oslo, Norway.
Abstract

Background: The method of chromatin immunoprecipitation combined with microarrays (ChIP-Chip) is a powerful tool for genome-wide analysis of protein binding. However, a high background signal is a common phenomenon.

Results: Reinvestigation of the chromatin immunoprecipitation procedure led us to discover four causes of high background: i) non-unique sequences, ii) incomplete reversion of crosslinks, iii) retention of protein in spin-columns and iv) insufficient RNase treatment. The chromatin immunoprecipitation method was modified and applied to analyze genome-wide binding of SeqA and sigma(32) in Escherichia coli.

Conclusions: False positive findings originating from these shortcomings of the method could explain surprising and contradictory findings in published ChIP-Chip studies. We present a modified chromatin immunoprecipitation method greatly reducing the background signal.

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