Entering edit mode
7.9 years ago
fusion.slope
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250
Dear Community,
am wondering if any of you know if there are specific genomic regions that are highly variable to antibody binding. I need to use a negative control in order to compare different sequencing techniques and am searching for such genomic regions to use as a negative control.
It would be very appreciated if any of you have an idea.
Best
Could you clarify what you mean by "variable to antibody binding"?
What kind of antibody are we talking about? (e.g. pan-IgG control; an actual DNA-specific antibody; a chromatin/TF antibody, other?)
This means that what ever Antibody one can use tho ChIP, you will never have a standard pattern. So it is a region of the genome in which you cannot trust if a peaks is a real peak or not. This is why i call it negative control.
It can be specific for antibody, Chromatin/TF, DNA specific antibody or Just a general regions in which all of them bind/interact randomly.
Does it makes sense?