Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) Recombinant Monoclonal Antibody

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Description

Introduction

The Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) Recombinant Monoclonal Antibody is a specialized tool for detecting mono-methylation at arginine 2 (R2) of histone H3.1, a post-translational modification critical to chromatin structure and gene regulation. This antibody is engineered to target a specific epigenetic marker, enabling researchers to study histone modifications in diverse biological contexts, including transcriptional control, DNA repair, and cellular differentiation.

Epitope and Target

The antibody recognizes the mono-methylated form of arginine 2 (R2) on histone H3.1, encoded by the HIST1H3A gene. Histone H3.1 is a core histone variant integral to nucleosome assembly, and its methylation at R2 is associated with active chromatin regions and transcriptional regulation .

Antibody Structure

  • Clonality: Monoclonal (e.g., clones 4G5 and DFB-8) .

  • Host Species: Rabbit or HEK293F cells (recombinant expression) .

  • Immunogen: Synthetic peptides corresponding to the R2-methylated region of histone H3.1 .

Specificity

The antibody demonstrates high specificity for H3.1 R2me1, with no cross-reactivity to unmethylated or other methylated forms (e.g., R2me2 or R2me3) . It can detect all H3.1 variants bearing R2me1, regardless of other histone modifications .

Applications and Experimental Protocols

This antibody is validated for multiple techniques:

ApplicationDilution RangeKey Findings
Western Blot (WB)1:500–1:2000Detects ~15 kDa bands in human cell lysates (e.g., HeLa, HepG2, SH-SY5Y) .
Immunocytochemistry1:50–1:500Nuclear staining in fixed cells (e.g., HeLa) .

Product Specs

Buffer
Rabbit IgG in phosphate buffered saline, pH 7.4, 150mM NaCl, 0.02% sodium azide and 50% glycerol.
Description

The mono-methyl-histone H3.1 (R2) recombinant monoclonal antibody is produced through a robust cloning and expression process. Genes encoding for the HIST1H3A antibody are cloned and expressed in mammalian cell expression systems. The heavy and light chains of the HIST1H3A antibody are individually cloned into expression vectors, which are subsequently introduced into host cells via transfection. These host cells then proceed to produce and secrete the antibodies, which are further purified through affinity chromatography. The resulting antibody has been rigorously tested for functionality in ELISA, WB, ICC, and IF applications, demonstrating its efficacy in detecting human HIST1H3A protein mono-methylated at R2.

Mono-methylation of HIST1H3A at arginine 2 (R2) is a significant epigenetic modification that plays a crucial role in influencing gene expression and chromatin structure. Notably, this modification promotes gene activation and accessibility. Its dynamic regulation is essential for maintaining cellular identity and responding to environmental cues, with potential implications in the development of various diseases.

Form
Liquid
Lead Time
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Synonyms
H3 histone family member E pseudogene antibody; H3 histone family; member A antibody; H3/A antibody; H31_HUMAN antibody; H3F3 antibody; H3FA antibody; Hist1h3a antibody; HIST1H3B antibody; HIST1H3C antibody; HIST1H3D antibody; HIST1H3E antibody; HIST1H3F antibody; HIST1H3G antibody; HIST1H3H antibody; HIST1H3I antibody; HIST1H3J antibody; HIST3H3 antibody; histone 1; H3a antibody; Histone cluster 1; H3a antibody; Histone H3 3 pseudogene antibody; Histone H3.1 antibody; Histone H3/a antibody; Histone H3/b antibody; Histone H3/c antibody; Histone H3/d antibody; Histone H3/f antibody; Histone H3/h antibody; Histone H3/i antibody; Histone H3/j antibody; Histone H3/k antibody; Histone H3/l antibody
Target Names
Uniprot No.

Target Background

Function

Histone H3.1 is a core component of nucleosomes. Nucleosomes function to wrap and compact DNA into chromatin, effectively limiting DNA accessibility to cellular machinery that requires DNA as a template. As a result, histones play a central role in regulating transcription, DNA repair, DNA replication, and chromosomal stability. The accessibility of DNA is regulated through a complex interplay of post-translational modifications of histones, collectively known as the histone code, and nucleosome remodeling.

Gene References Into Functions
  1. Research suggests a mechanism for epigenetic regulation in cancer through the induction of E3 ubiquitin ligase NEDD4-dependent histone H3 ubiquitination. PMID: 28300060
  2. The identification of increased expression of H3K27me3 during a patient's clinical course can be helpful in determining whether tumors are heterochronous. PMID: 29482987
  3. Research reports that JMJD5, a Jumonji C (JmjC) domain-containing protein, acts as a Cathepsin L-type protease that mediates histone H3 N-tail proteolytic cleavage under stress conditions, triggering a DNA damage response. PMID: 28982940
  4. Data suggests that the Ki-67 antigen proliferative index has notable limitations, and phosphohistone H3 (PHH3) serves as an alternative proliferative marker. PMID: 29040195
  5. These findings identify cytokine-induced histone 3 lysine 27 trimethylation as a mechanism that stabilizes gene silencing in macrophages. PMID: 27653678
  6. This data indicates that, in the early developing human brain, HIST1H3B constitutes the largest proportion of H3.1 transcripts among H3.1 isoforms. PMID: 27251074
  7. This series of 47 diffuse midline gliomas revealed that the histone H3-K27M mutation was mutually exclusive with IDH1-R132H mutation and EGFR amplification. It rarely co-occurred with BRAF-V600E mutation and was commonly associated with p53 overexpression, ATRX loss, and monosomy 10. Among these K27M+ diffuse midline gliomas. PMID: 26517431
  8. Data shows that histone chaperone HIRA co-localizes with viral genomes, binds to incoming viral and deposits histone H3.3 onto these. PMID: 28981850
  9. These experiments demonstrated that PHF13 binds specifically to DNA and to two types of histone H3 methyl tags (lysine 4-tri-methyl or lysine 4-di-methyl), where it functions as a transcriptional co-regulator. PMID: 27223324
  10. Hemi-methylated CpGs DNA recognition activates UHRF1 ubiquitylation towards multiple lysines on the H3 tail adjacent to the UHRF1 histone-binding site. PMID: 27595565
  11. We describe, for the first time, the MR imaging features of pediatric diffuse midline gliomas with histone H3 K27M mutation. PMID: 28183840
  12. Approximately 30% of pediatric high grade gliomas (pedHGG), including GBM and DIPG, harbor a lysine 27 mutation (K27M) in histone 3.3 (H3.3), which is correlated with poor outcome and was shown to influence EZH2 function. PMID: 27135271
  13. H3F3A K27M mutation in adult cerebellar HGG is not rare. PMID: 28547652
  14. Data shows that lysyl oxidase-like 2 (LOXL2) is a histone modifier enzyme that removes trimethylated lysine 4 (K4) in histone H3 (H3K4me3) through an amino-oxidase reaction. PMID: 27735137
  15. Histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9) acetylation was most prevalent when the Dbf4 transcription level was highest, whereas the H3K9me3 level was greatest during and just after replication. PMID: 27341472
  16. SPOP-containing complex regulates SETD2 stability and H3K36me3-coupled alternative splicing. PMID: 27614073
  17. Data suggests that binding of the helical tail of histone 3 (H3) with PHD ('plant homeodomain') fingers of BAZ2A or BAZ2B (bromodomain adjacent to zinc finger domain 2A or 2B) requires molecular recognition of secondary structure motifs within the H3 tail and could represent an additional layer of regulation in epigenetic processes. PMID: 28341809
  18. The results demonstrate a novel mechanism by which Kdm4d regulates DNA replication by reducing the H3K9me3 level to facilitate formation of the preinitiation complex. PMID: 27679476
  19. Histone H3 modifications caused by traffic-derived airborne particulate matter exposures in leukocytes. PMID: 27918982
  20. A key role of persistent histone H3 serine 10 or serine 28 phosphorylation in chemical carcinogenesis through regulating gene transcription of DNA damage response genes. PMID: 27996159
  21. hTERT promoter mutations are frequent in medulloblastoma and are associated with older patients, prone to recurrence and located in the right cerebellar hemisphere. On the other hand, histone 3 mutations do not seem to be present in medulloblastoma. PMID: 27694758
  22. AS1eRNA-driven DNA looping and activating histone modifications promote the expression of DHRS4-AS1 to economically control the DHRS4 gene cluster. PMID: 26864944
  23. Data suggests that nuclear antigen Sp100C is a multifaceted histone H3 methylation and phosphorylation sensor. PMID: 27129259
  24. The authors propose that histone H3 threonine 118 phosphorylation via Aurora-A alters the chromatin structure during specific phases of mitosis to promote timely condensin I and cohesin disassociation, which is essential for effective chromosome segregation. PMID: 26878753
  25. Hemi-methylated DNA opens a closed conformation of UHRF1 to facilitate its H3 histone recognition. PMID: 27045799
  26. Functional importance of H3K9me3 in hypoxia, apoptosis, and repression of APAK. PMID: 25961932
  27. Taken together, the authors verified that histone H3 is a real substrate for GzmA in vivo in the Raji cells treated by staurosporin. PMID: 26032366
  28. We conclude that circulating H3 levels correlate with mortality in sepsis patients and inversely correlate with antithrombin levels and platelet counts. PMID: 26232351
  29. Data shows that double mutations on the residues in the interface (L325A/D328A) decreases the histone H3 H3K4me2/3 demethylation activity of lysine (K)-specific demethylase 5B (KDM5B). PMID: 24952722
  30. Data indicate that minichromosome maintenance protein 2 (MCM2) binding is not required for incorporation of histone H3.1-H4 into chromatin but is important for stability of H3.1-H4. PMID: 26167883
  31. Data suggests that histone H3 lysine methylation (H3K4me3) serves a crucial mechanistic role in leukemia stem cell (LSC) maintenance. PMID: 26190263
  32. PIP5K1A modulates ribosomal RNA gene silencing through its interaction with histone H3 lysine 9 trimethylation and heterochromatin protein HP1-alpha. PMID: 26157143
  33. Data indicate that lower-resolution mass spectrometry instruments can be utilized for histone post-translational modifications (PTMs) analysis. PMID: 25325711
  34. Data indicate that inhibition of lysine-specific demethylase 1 activity prevented IL-1beta-induced histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9) demethylation at microsomal prostaglandin E synthase 1 (mPGES-1) promoter. PMID: 24886859
  35. The authors report that de novo CENP-A assembly and kinetochore formation on human centromeric alphoid DNA arrays is regulated by a histone H3K9 acetyl/methyl balance. PMID: 22473132
Database Links

HGNC: 4766

OMIM: 137800

KEGG: hsa:8350

STRING: 9606.ENSP00000444823

UniGene: Hs.132854

Involvement In Disease
Glioma (GLM)
Protein Families
Histone H3 family
Subcellular Location
Nucleus. Chromosome.

Q&A

What is Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) and how does it differ from other histone methylation marks?

Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) is a post-translational modification occurring on arginine 2 of the replication-dependent histone variant H3.1. Unlike H3.3 methylation, H3.1 methylation is primarily associated with silent genomic regions and heterochromatin formation. The key distinction between H3.1 and H3.3 variants lies at position 31, with alanine in H3.1 and threonine in H3.3, which affects methylation potential by histone-modifying enzymes . This specific methylation serves distinct epigenetic functions compared to other histone marks, participating in transcriptional regulation, DNA replication timing, and chromatin structure maintenance.

How is the specificity of Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies determined and validated?

The specificity of these antibodies is determined through rigorous validation protocols that assess cross-reactivity against unmethylated H3.1, di/tri-methylated H3.1(R2), methylated H3.3, and other histone variants. Commercial antibodies undergo validation via multiple approaches:

  • ELISA using peptide arrays containing various methylated and unmethylated histone variants

  • Western blot analysis comparing reactivity against purified histones

  • Immunofluorescence in cells with knockdown/knockout of methyltransferases

  • ChIP-seq correlation with known genomic distribution patterns

Researchers should select antibodies validated specifically for their intended applications (ELISA, WB, ICC, IF) as validation stringency may vary by application .

What are the optimal conditions for using Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies in Western blot applications?

For Western blot applications with Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies, the following protocol has been optimized based on experimental validation:

ParameterRecommended ConditionsNotes
Dilution Range1:500 - 1:2000Optimize for specific antibody lot
Blocking Solution5% BSA in TBSTMilk can interfere with some epitope recognition
Sample PreparationAcid extraction of histonesImproves detection compared to whole-cell lysates
Loading Amount5-15 μg proteinDependent on cell type and methylation abundance
Transfer ConditionsLow MW protein settingsTypically 100V for 60-90 minutes
MembranePVDF preferredNitrocellulose also acceptable
Primary Antibody IncubationOvernight at 4°CFor optimal signal-to-noise ratio

When interpreting results, it's crucial to include appropriate controls, such as purified recombinant H3.1 with and without methylation, and consider the impact of neighboring histone modifications on epitope recognition .

How can I optimize Chromatin Immunoprecipitation (ChIP) protocols specifically for Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies?

While standard ChIP protocols can be adapted for Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies, several optimization steps are critical for success:

  • Chromatin preparation: Use 1% formaldehyde for 10 minutes at room temperature for optimal crosslinking, as overfixation can mask the R2 epitope

  • Sonication parameters: Generate fragments of 200-500 bp for optimal resolution of H3.1-specific regions

  • Antibody amount: Use 2-5 μg of antibody per ChIP reaction (adjust based on antibody quality)

  • Washing stringency: Include high-salt washes (500 mM NaCl) to reduce background

  • Elution conditions: Standard elution with SDS is effective for most applications

For ChIP-seq applications, it's essential to sequence sufficient depth (>20 million uniquely mapped reads) to capture the predominantly heterochromatic distribution of H3.1 methylation. Bioinformatic analysis should account for repetitive elements where H3.1 is enriched .

What are the key considerations for immunofluorescence experiments with Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies?

For successful immunofluorescence using Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies:

  • Fixation method: Paraformaldehyde (4%) for 10-15 minutes preserves nuclear architecture while maintaining epitope accessibility

  • Permeabilization: 0.2% Triton X-100 for 10 minutes is generally effective; avoid methanol which can extract histones

  • Antibody dilution: Start with 1:50-1:200 dilution range and optimize

  • Blocking: Use 3-5% BSA with 0.1% Tween-20 to reduce background

  • Incubation time: Overnight at 4°C typically yields superior signal-to-noise ratios

  • Epitope retrieval: May be necessary in formaldehyde-fixed tissues (10mM citrate buffer, pH 6.0)

  • Counterstaining: DAPI for DNA visualization; consider co-staining with markers for specific nuclear compartments

The nuclear distribution pattern should show punctate staining corresponding to heterochromatic regions, which can be confirmed by co-localization with H3K9me3 or HP1 markers .

How does the genomic distribution of Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) correlate with other epigenetic marks and gene expression?

Genome-wide analyses have revealed distinct patterns of Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) distribution that correlate with specific chromatin states:

  • Enrichment in silent genomic regions: H3.1 is preferentially found in transcriptionally inactive regions, showing inverse correlation with RNA Polymerase II occupancy

  • Association with repressive marks: Strong co-localization with H3K27me3, H3K9me2/3, and DNA methylation in all sequence contexts (CG, CHG, and CHH)

  • Replication timing correlation: Enrichment at defined origins of replication, suggesting functional roles in DNA replication regulation

  • Transposable element association: Significant enrichment over transposable elements, consistent with heterochromatic localization

When examining the relationship between H3.1 methylation and gene expression, RNA-seq data demonstrates an anticorrelation between H3.1 enrichment and transcriptional activity. Approximately 20,097 genomic regions show significant H3.1 enrichment, with these regions displaying elevated DNA methylation levels compared to genome-wide averages .

What are the current hypotheses regarding the functional significance of Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) in chromatin regulation?

Several key hypotheses have emerged regarding the functional roles of Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2):

  • Inheritance of heterochromatic states: The replication-coupled incorporation of H3.1 may provide a mechanism for propagating silenced chromatin states through cell division

  • Transcriptional repression: Mono-methylation at R2 potentially interferes with activating modifications or recruits specific repressive complexes

  • Regulation of DNA replication: Enrichment at origins of replication suggests roles in controlling replication timing or origin firing

  • Protection against inappropriate recombination: Heterochromatic marks including H3.1 methylation maintain genome stability by preventing recombination between repetitive elements

  • Cell identity maintenance: Stable patterns of H3.1 methylation may contribute to cell-type-specific gene expression programs

Recent research indicates that specialized histone-modifying enzymes selectively target H3.1 but not H3.3, suggesting evolved mechanisms to distinguish between replication-dependent and independent histone variants .

What are common pitfalls in antibody selection for Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) detection and how can they be avoided?

Several technical challenges can compromise experiments using Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies:

  • Cross-reactivity with other methylated arginines: Validate that antibodies distinguish between methylation at R2, R8, R17, and R26 positions on histone H3

  • Failure to discriminate methylation states: Ensure antibodies specifically recognize mono-methylation rather than di- or tri-methylation

  • H3 variant specificity concerns: Confirm specificity for H3.1 versus H3.3, particularly if the antibody epitope spans regions containing variant-specific residues

  • Lot-to-lot variability: Perform validation for each new antibody lot, especially for quantitative applications

  • Application-specific optimization: An antibody validated for Western blot may not perform optimally in ChIP applications

To avoid these pitfalls, researchers should:

  • Request validation data specific to their application of interest

  • Perform peptide competition assays with methylated and unmethylated peptides

  • Include appropriate controls (knockdown/knockout of relevant methyltransferases)

  • Consider using orthogonal techniques to validate key findings

How can I troubleshoot weak or nonspecific signals when using Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies?

When encountering signal problems with Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies, consider this structured troubleshooting approach:

ProblemPotential CausesSolutions
Weak signalInsufficient antigenIncrease protein loading; use histone extraction protocols
Epitope maskingTry alternative fixation methods; consider epitope retrieval
Low antibody concentrationOptimize antibody dilution; increase incubation time
Degraded antibodyEnsure proper storage; avoid freeze-thaw cycles
High backgroundInsufficient blockingIncrease blocking time/concentration; try alternative blocking agents
Cross-reactivityUse more stringent washing; pre-absorb antibody
Secondary antibody issuesInclude secondary-only controls; try different secondary
Multiple bands in WBCross-reactivityConfirm with peptide competition; try more specific antibody
Histone modificationsConsider the impact of neighboring modifications on epitope
Degradation productsUse fresh samples; add protease inhibitors

For particularly challenging samples, consider enriching for histone fraction using acid extraction (0.2N HCl) before immunoblotting, which can dramatically improve signal-to-noise ratio .

How can Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies be applied in single-cell epigenomic analyses?

Emerging single-cell technologies are being adapted for Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) detection:

  • Single-cell CUT&Tag/CUT&RUN: These antibody-directed genomic mapping techniques can be applied at single-cell resolution to profile H3.1 methylation patterns across heterogeneous populations

  • Mass cytometry (CyTOF): Using metal-conjugated antibodies allows simultaneous detection of multiple histone modifications including H3.1-R2me1 in thousands of individual cells

  • Single-cell imaging techniques: Advanced microscopy approaches like structured illumination microscopy (SIM) and stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM) enable visualization of H3.1 methylation distribution within nuclear subcompartments

Implementation requires:

  • Rigorous antibody validation for specificity in single-cell contexts

  • Appropriate normalization strategies to account for technical variation

  • Integration with other single-cell modalities (scRNA-seq, scATAC-seq) for multi-omic analyses

  • Computational approaches to distinguish biologically meaningful patterns from technical noise

Researchers pioneering these approaches should include comprehensive controls and validate findings with orthogonal techniques when possible .

What is the current understanding of the relationship between Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) and disease states, particularly cancer?

Research into the relationship between Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) and disease states is still emerging, but several important connections have been established:

  • Cancer epigenetics: Altered patterns of H3.1 methylation have been observed in various cancer types, potentially contributing to aberrant gene silencing of tumor suppressors

  • Epigenetic inheritance: Dysregulation of H3.1 variant incorporation and its associated modifications may affect transgenerational epigenetic inheritance

  • Developmental disorders: Mutations in enzymes regulating H3.1 methylation have been implicated in developmental abnormalities and intellectual disability syndromes

  • Cellular senescence: Changes in H3.1 distribution and modification contribute to senescence-associated heterochromatin formation

For researchers investigating these connections, it's crucial to:

  • Establish baseline H3.1-R2me1 patterns in normal tissues corresponding to disease models

  • Use multiple antibody-based approaches to confirm findings (ChIP-seq, immunohistochemistry)

  • Incorporate genetic or pharmacological manipulation of relevant methyltransferases

  • Consider the interplay between H3.1 methylation and other epigenetic mechanisms in disease progression

How do the enzymatic mechanisms for Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) establishment and recognition differ from other histone methylation pathways?

The enzymatic regulation of Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) involves specialized molecular machinery:

  • Methyltransferase specificity: Crystal structure studies of histone methyltransferases that target H3.1 reveal a bipartite catalytic domain that specifically "reads" alanine 31 of H3.1, distinguishing it from H3.3 which contains threonine at this position

  • Structural basis for variant discrimination: Key residues in the methyltransferase (such as E212 and R334 identified in plant ATXR5/6) form a specificity pocket that accommodates the H3.1-specific alanine 31 but generates steric clashes with threonine 31 in H3.3

  • "Safety belt" conformational mechanism: A loop structure in some methyltransferases folds back on top of H3.1, locking the peptide in a conformation that forces alanine 31 into the specificity pocket

  • Methyl-reader domains: Specific protein domains have evolved to recognize mono-methylated R2 in the context of H3.1, potentially recruiting additional factors to regulate chromatin structure

Experimental approaches to study these mechanisms include:

  • Site-directed mutagenesis of key residues in methyltransferases and reader proteins

  • In vitro histone lysine methyltransferase (HKM) assays comparing activity on H3.1 vs. H3.3 substrates

  • Structural biology approaches including X-ray crystallography and cryo-EM

  • Genetic studies manipulating the expression of methyltransferases and evaluating genomic consequences

How can I effectively combine Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibody-based approaches with other epigenomic techniques?

Integrative approaches yield more comprehensive understanding:

  • ChIP-seq with other epigenetic marks: Sequential or parallel ChIP-seq for H3.1-R2me1 and other modifications (H3K27me3, H3K9me3, DNA methylation) enables correlation analyses and identification of bivalent domains

  • CUT&RUN/CUT&Tag alternatives: These techniques offer higher signal-to-noise ratio and require fewer cells than traditional ChIP, particularly valuable for rare cell populations

  • Hi-C and chromatin conformation: Combining H3.1 methylation data with chromosome conformation capture techniques reveals relationships between this modification and 3D genome organization

  • ATAC-seq integration: Correlating H3.1 methylation with chromatin accessibility provides insights into functional consequences of this modification

  • Multi-omics approaches: Integrated analyses with transcriptomics and proteomics datasets help establish causal relationships between H3.1 methylation and gene regulation

Implementation requires careful experimental design, including:

  • Performing techniques on the same or matched biological samples

  • Appropriate computational pipelines for multi-omic data integration

  • Statistical approaches to distinguish correlation from causation

  • Validation of key findings through perturbation experiments

What computational approaches are recommended for analyzing ChIP-seq data generated with Mono-methyl-Histone H3.1 (R2) antibodies?

Computational analysis of H3.1-R2me1 ChIP-seq requires specialized approaches:

  • Peak calling considerations: Standard peak callers may not optimally capture broad domains of H3.1 enrichment; algorithms designed for broad histone marks (SICER, MACS2 with broad peak settings) are recommended

  • Dealing with repetitive elements: H3.1 is enriched in repetitive regions, requiring careful handling of multi-mapping reads (consider using tools like RepEnrich2)

  • Differential binding analysis: DESeq2 or diffBind packages can identify regions with altered H3.1 methylation between conditions

  • Integration with chromatin states: Tools like ChromHMM can incorporate H3.1 methylation data into broader chromatin state models

  • Visualization approaches: Specialized browsers like WashU Epigenome Browser or UCSC Genome Browser with custom tracks enable visualization of H3.1 patterns in genomic context

A typical analysis pipeline includes:

  • Quality control (FastQC, multiqc)

  • Alignment (Bowtie2 with parameters optimized for histone marks)

  • Peak calling (MACS2 with broad peak settings)

  • Annotation (HOMER, ChIPseeker)

  • Motif analysis (MEME-ChIP)

  • Integration with other datasets (deepTools, bedtools)

For researchers with limited computational experience, several integrated workflows and Galaxy-based tools can simplify this process .

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