Ok, Greg!

Thank you for your answer.
I do know this stuff about tracks. And can't pull any really needed
information out of it.

Yes, it would be better to contact certain labs responsible for data.

Alex

22 марта 2011 г. 22:59 пользователь Greg Roe <[email protected]> написал:

> Hi Alexander,
>
> I'm not sure which track you might be on (there are several that are
> chip-seq related), but when you're at the genome browser, you can click on
> the title of each track (i.e. the text above the dropown menu)  to get a
> description of that track.  The information you are looking for may be in
> the track description. If not, I would suggest contacting the lab who
> provided the data for more information. The contact information is often
> listed in the Credits section.
>
> Please let us know if you have any additional questions.
>
> -
> Greg Roe
> UCSC Genome Bioinformatics Group
>
>
>
> On 3/21/11 3:31 AM, Александр Белостоцкий wrote:
>
>> Dear Sir/Madam,
>>
>> Would you ask two question about cells used in ChIP-seq experiments.
>> 1. Were these cells synchronized before ChIP-seq experiments?
>> I mean not cell cycle of cause, but may be more precise synchronization.
>> 2. Were these cells used in parallel for ChIP-seq experiments for
>> different
>> proteins?
>> Second question means that one particular cell lineage were used at one
>> time
>> of its life in ChIP-seq with different antibodies. So all data available
>> for
>> one lineage is about one different proteins at one time in this lineage.
>>
>> Thank you!
>>
>> Alexander
>> _______________________________________________
>> Genome maillist  -  [email protected]
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>>
>
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