New Histone GO® Peptides from AnaSpec

15 Sept 2010
Sarah Sarah
Marketing / Sales

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AnaSpec introduces a wide selection of Histone H1, H2A, H2B, H3 and H4 peptides. The rapidly expanding Histone H3 GO ® Peptides include sequences that are acetylated, mono-, di- or tri-methylated, phosphorylated and biotinylated.

Chromatin exist either as the transcriptionally active euchromatin or as the transcriptionally repressed heterchromatin state.1 Post-translational modifications of histone “tails” (amino termini) have been implicated in the conversion between the two states. Covalent modifications, such as acetylation, methylation and phosphorylation affect chromatin structure and exquisitely regulate gene expression. Histone hyperacetylation is correlated with increased transcription, whereas hypoacetylation correlates with transcriptional repression. In Histone H3, preferential methylation sites have been shown to be Lys4, Lys9, Lys27 and Lys36, with methylation generally leading to transcriptional suppression. Methylation of specific arginine residues in H3 has been shown to correlate with cell fate and potency. Phosphorylation at Ser10 (pSer10) is implicated in both transcription and cell division.

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ProteomicsProteomics is the systemic bioinformatics study of proteins and amino acids, including their structure, size, function and identification. Tools used in proteomics include chromatography, blotting and gels, protein arrays, mass spectrometry and ELISA and associated analysis software. Analyzers and proteomic systems should be sensitive, high resolution, fast and may be automated for high-throughput.
New Histone GO® Peptides from AnaSpec