- Tel: 858.663.9055
Email: info@nsjbio.com
- Tel: 858.663.9055
- Email: info@nsjbio.com
Histone antibodies for chromatin and epigenetics research are essential tools for studying nucleosome structure, chromatin organization, and regulation of gene expression. Core histone proteins including Histone H2A, H2B, H3, and H4 form the nucleosome and provide a structural and regulatory platform for DNA packaging and genome stability. This collection of histone antibodies enables detection of total histone proteins, histone variants, and a wide range of modification-specific chromatin states.
Histone proteins are extensively modified through post-translational modifications that control chromatin accessibility and transcriptional activity. These include acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation, and emerging acylation marks such as crotonylation. Targeted reagents such as histone H3 antibodies, histone H2A antibodies, histone H2B antibodies, and histone H4 antibodies allow precise investigation of epigenetic mechanisms and chromatin dynamics across diverse biological systems.
Different histone proteins contribute unique regulatory roles within chromatin. Histone H3 serves as a major platform for regulatory modifications such as lysine methylation and acetylation, Histone H2A includes important variants such as H2A.Z involved in transcriptional regulation, Histone H2B participates in chromatin remodeling and transcriptional control, and Histone H4 plays key roles in chromatin compaction and genome integrity. Together, these histone antibodies support comprehensive analysis of chromatin biology at both structural and regulatory levels.
Histone antibodies are used to detect core histone proteins and their variants, including:
These categories collectively enable investigation of chromatin organization and epigenetic regulation across different histone families.
Histone antibodies are widely used to study a broad range of epigenetic modifications, including:
These modifications collectively define chromatin states that regulate gene expression, DNA repair, and genome stability.
Histone antibodies are widely used to investigate chromatin organization, histone modification dynamics, and epigenetic regulation, providing essential tools for studying transcriptional control, genome stability, and chromatin-based regulatory mechanisms across normal physiology and disease.
Researchers studying chromatin organization, epigenetic regulation, and nucleosome associated signaling pathways may also be interested in our Cell Biology Antibodies landing page featuring nuclear markers, intracellular regulators, and signaling related targets.
Browse the complete collection of research antibodies on our Antibodies landing page.
Histone Antibodies. Immunohistochemistry analysis of histone proteins in human cells using histone antibodies demonstrates strong nuclear staining consistent with chromatin-associated localization. Nuclear signal reflects distribution of histones within nucleosomes, supporting their role in chromatin organization, epigenetic regulation, and genome stability, while cytoplasmic structures provide morphological context.