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Methylation Analysis

We offer kits and restriction enzymes for methylation analysis, including assays for methylation detection and methyltransferase activity and reagents for bisulfate conversion.

The MTase-Glo™ Assay allows you to measure the activity of any methyltransferase and does not require substrate modification. The Succinate-Glo™ Assay can be used with any succinate-producing enzyme for the detection of demethylase activity. Both bioluminescence-based assays come in a simple add-and-read format.

The MethylEdge® System offers complete bisulfite conversion with minimal DNA fragmentation. Room-temperature, ready-to-use reagents provide high-efficiency DNA conversion in less than two hours.

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Methylation Analysis Basics

DNA methylation is catalyzed by DNA methyltransferases and associated with epigenetic gene repression. DNA methylation also recruits methyl-CpG-binding proteins, which recruit additional proteins that add silencing modifications to neighboring histones. CpG islands are unmethylated, open regions of DNA with low nucleosome occupancy that promote relaxed chromatin structure that favors active transcription. Coordination between DNA methylation and silencing histone marks leads to chromatin compaction and gene repression.

The methylation status of a DNA sequence can be determined using a variety of techniques, such as restriction enzymes that are sensitive to methylation or the firefly luciferase reporter protein (Fluc). Bisulfite sequencing is another way to assess DNA methylation by converting unmethylated cytosine residues to uracil residues. The target DNA is purified, alkaline- or heat-denatured, treated with sodium bisulfite, cleaned up, treated with alkaline, then cleaned up again to remove salts and other components that can inhibit downstream applications.

After bisulfite conversion and DNA cleanup, the DNA is amplified by whole genome PCR, and the amplified products are analyzed using a technique that distinguishes products derived from unmethylated and methylated DNA. The firefly luciferase reporter protein can also be used to assess DNA methylation at the genome level or at specific DNA sequences.