Chromatin immunoprecipitation improvements for the processing of small frozen pieces of adipose tissue.
Daniel Castellano-CastilloPierre-Damien DenechaudIsabel Moreno-IndiasFrancisco TinahonesLluis FajasMaría Isabel Queipo-OrtuñoFernando CardonaPublished in: PloS one (2018)
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) has gained importance to identify links between the genome and the proteome. Adipose tissue has emerged as an active tissue, which secretes a wide range of molecules that have been related to metabolic and obesity-related disorders, such as diabetes, cardiovascular failure, metabolic syndrome, or cancer. In turn, epigenetics has raised the importance in discerning the possible relationship between metabolic disorders, lifestyle and environment. However, ChIP application in human adipose tissue is limited by several factors, such as sample size, frozen sample availability, high lipid content and cellular composition of the tissue. Here, we optimize the standard protocol of ChIP for small pieces of frozen human adipose tissue. In addition, we test ChIP for the histone mark H3K4m3, which is related to active promoters, and validate the performance of the ChIP by analyzing gene promoters for factors usually studied in adipose tissue using qPCR. Our improvements result in a higher performance in chromatin shearing and DNA recovery of adipocytes from the tissue, which may be useful for ChIP-qPCR or ChIP-seq analysis.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- insulin resistance
- high throughput
- circulating tumor cells
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- high fat diet
- gene expression
- endothelial cells
- type diabetes
- dna damage
- cardiovascular disease
- circulating tumor
- dna methylation
- single cell
- squamous cell carcinoma
- high fat diet induced
- randomized controlled trial
- cell free
- fatty acid
- glycemic control
- living cells