Handbook of RNA Biochemistry 2005
DOI: 10.1002/9783527619504.ch11
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Study of RNA–Protein Interactions and RNA Structure in Ribonucleoprotein Particles

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…As binding competitors can also reduce the amount of specific binding, it is best to test a range of competitor concentrations, and to optimize the discrimination of specific and nonspecific binding. In this case, useful competitors include heparin, poly d(A) and poly d(T) DNAs, poly (U) RNA and mixed tRNAs (these are useful when the proteins in question are not specifically tRNA-binding proteins) [51]. The key point here is that the competitor should have structural or sequence attributes that allow nonspecific binding, but it should lack the sequence and/or secondary structures needed for specific binding by the protein(s) of interest (see also Chapter 32 Branlant for a discussion of inhibitors).…”
Section: Competing Nucleic Acids and Polyanionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As binding competitors can also reduce the amount of specific binding, it is best to test a range of competitor concentrations, and to optimize the discrimination of specific and nonspecific binding. In this case, useful competitors include heparin, poly d(A) and poly d(T) DNAs, poly (U) RNA and mixed tRNAs (these are useful when the proteins in question are not specifically tRNA-binding proteins) [51]. The key point here is that the competitor should have structural or sequence attributes that allow nonspecific binding, but it should lack the sequence and/or secondary structures needed for specific binding by the protein(s) of interest (see also Chapter 32 Branlant for a discussion of inhibitors).…”
Section: Competing Nucleic Acids and Polyanionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Current versions of the EMSA provide very little direct information about the location(s) of the binding site(s) that are occupied in protein-nucleic acid complexes. However, footprinting assays [50,51,60,61] carried out in parallel with EMSA provide an effective approach to identifying the occupied sequences.…”
Section: Example Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%