RNA Interference and its therapeutic applications

RNAi is a potent method, requiring only a few molecules of dsRNA per cell to silence the expression. Long molecules of double stranded RNA (dsRNA) trigger the process. The dsRNA comes from virus and transposon activity in natural RNAi process, while it can be injected in the cells in experimental pr...

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Main Authors: Srinivasa Rao T, Srinivasa Prasad Ch, Showkat Ahmed Shah1 and Mudasir Ali Rather
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Veterinary World 2011-10-01
Series:Veterinary World
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scopemed.org/mnstemps/2/2-1301051956.pdf
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spelling doaj-61619239e7ee496892b59af18ed319af2021-08-02T13:05:33ZengVeterinary WorldVeterinary World0972-89882011-10-0145.000225229RNA Interference and its therapeutic applicationsSrinivasa Rao TSrinivasa Prasad ChShowkat Ahmed Shah1 and Mudasir Ali RatherRNAi is a potent method, requiring only a few molecules of dsRNA per cell to silence the expression. Long molecules of double stranded RNA (dsRNA) trigger the process. The dsRNA comes from virus and transposon activity in natural RNAi process, while it can be injected in the cells in experimental processes. The strand of the dsRNA that is identical in sequence to a region in target mRNA molecule is called the sense strand, and the other strand which is complimentary is termed the antisense strand. An enzyme complex called DICER thought to be similar to RNAase III then recognizes dsRNA, and cuts it into roughly 22- nucleotide long fragments. These fragments termed siRNAs for “small interfering RNAs” remain in double stranded duplexes with very short 3' overhangs. However, only one of the two strands, known as the guide strand or antisense strand binds the argonaute protein of RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) and target the complementary mRNA resulting gene silencing. The other anti-guide strand or passenger strand is degraded as a RISC substrate during the process of RISC activation. This form of RNAi is termed as post transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS); other forms are also thought to operate at the genomic or transcriptional level in some organisms. In mammals dsRNA longer than 30 base pairs induces a nonspecific antiviral response. This so-called interferon response results in a nonspecific arrest in translation and induction of apoptosis. This cascade induces a global non-specific suppression of translation, which in turn triggers apoptosis. Interestingly, dsRNAs less than 30 nt in length do not activate the antiviral response and specifically switched off genes in human cells without initiating the acute phase response. Thus these siRNAs are suitable for gene target validation and therapeutic applications in many species, including humans. [Vet. World 2011; 4(5.000): 225-229] http://www.scopemed.org/mnstemps/2/2-1301051956.pdfRNAiDelivery of siRNATherapeutic applicationsAntivirusApoptosisCell
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Srinivasa Rao T
Srinivasa Prasad Ch
Showkat Ahmed Shah1 and Mudasir Ali Rather
spellingShingle Srinivasa Rao T
Srinivasa Prasad Ch
Showkat Ahmed Shah1 and Mudasir Ali Rather
RNA Interference and its therapeutic applications
Veterinary World
RNAi
Delivery of siRNA
Therapeutic applications
Antivirus
Apoptosis
Cell
author_facet Srinivasa Rao T
Srinivasa Prasad Ch
Showkat Ahmed Shah1 and Mudasir Ali Rather
author_sort Srinivasa Rao T
title RNA Interference and its therapeutic applications
title_short RNA Interference and its therapeutic applications
title_full RNA Interference and its therapeutic applications
title_fullStr RNA Interference and its therapeutic applications
title_full_unstemmed RNA Interference and its therapeutic applications
title_sort rna interference and its therapeutic applications
publisher Veterinary World
series Veterinary World
issn 0972-8988
publishDate 2011-10-01
description RNAi is a potent method, requiring only a few molecules of dsRNA per cell to silence the expression. Long molecules of double stranded RNA (dsRNA) trigger the process. The dsRNA comes from virus and transposon activity in natural RNAi process, while it can be injected in the cells in experimental processes. The strand of the dsRNA that is identical in sequence to a region in target mRNA molecule is called the sense strand, and the other strand which is complimentary is termed the antisense strand. An enzyme complex called DICER thought to be similar to RNAase III then recognizes dsRNA, and cuts it into roughly 22- nucleotide long fragments. These fragments termed siRNAs for “small interfering RNAs” remain in double stranded duplexes with very short 3' overhangs. However, only one of the two strands, known as the guide strand or antisense strand binds the argonaute protein of RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) and target the complementary mRNA resulting gene silencing. The other anti-guide strand or passenger strand is degraded as a RISC substrate during the process of RISC activation. This form of RNAi is termed as post transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS); other forms are also thought to operate at the genomic or transcriptional level in some organisms. In mammals dsRNA longer than 30 base pairs induces a nonspecific antiviral response. This so-called interferon response results in a nonspecific arrest in translation and induction of apoptosis. This cascade induces a global non-specific suppression of translation, which in turn triggers apoptosis. Interestingly, dsRNAs less than 30 nt in length do not activate the antiviral response and specifically switched off genes in human cells without initiating the acute phase response. Thus these siRNAs are suitable for gene target validation and therapeutic applications in many species, including humans. [Vet. World 2011; 4(5.000): 225-229]
topic RNAi
Delivery of siRNA
Therapeutic applications
Antivirus
Apoptosis
Cell
url http://www.scopemed.org/mnstemps/2/2-1301051956.pdf
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