Description
In the eukaryotic cells, DNA is packaged repetitively into nucleosomes by means of interactions among two molecules of four classes of histone, H2A, H2B, H3 and H4. Each of the histone proteins has an evolutionarily conserved amino-terminal ‘tail’ that protrudes from the nucleosome. This tail is the target of numerous diverse signaling pathways, resulting in the addition of many post-translational modifications. These modifications include phosphorylation, acetylation, methylation, ADP-ribosylation and mono-ubiquitination. Many important new modifications within the structured core and the carboxy-terminal tail regions of histones are also being identified. It is becoming increasingly clear that these modifications represent crucial regulatory events that govern the accessibility and function of the genome.
Applications
- Western blotting (1000 fold dilution)
- Immunoprecipitation (CHIP assay)
Specification
Antigen: Synthetic peptide corresponding to the amino-terminal S. pombe histone H2B, SAAEKKPASKAPAGKA
Reactivity: S. pombe histone H2B
Antibody: Undiluted rabbit antiserum added with 0.05 % sodium azide
Storage: ship 4°C and store at -20°C or long term -80°C
Data Link UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot P04913 (H2B1_SCHPO)
Reference
- Maruyama T et al ” Histone H2B mutations in inner region affect ubiquitination, centromere function, silencing and chromosome segregation” EMBO J 25: 2420-2431 (2006) PMID: 16688222
Fig.1 Identification of histone H2B in the crude extract of fission yeast S. pombe with this anti body. The 17 kDa and 24~25 kDa bands correspond to the unmodified and the mono-ubiquitinated histone H2B, respectively, as described in Ref.1.
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.