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Functional polarity is introduced by Dicer processing of short substrate RNAs

Synthetic RNA duplexes that are substrates for Dicer are potent triggers of RNA interference (RNAi). Blunt 27mer duplexes can be up to 100-fold more potent than traditional 21mer duplexes (1). Not all 27mer duplexes show increased potency. Evaluation of the products of in vitro dicing reactions usin...

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Autores principales: Rose, Scott D., Kim, Dong-Ho, Amarzguioui, Mohammed, Heidel, Jeremy D., Collingwood, Michael A., Davis, Mark E., Rossi, John J., Behlke, Mark A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1180746/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16049023
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki732
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author Rose, Scott D.
Kim, Dong-Ho
Amarzguioui, Mohammed
Heidel, Jeremy D.
Collingwood, Michael A.
Davis, Mark E.
Rossi, John J.
Behlke, Mark A.
author_facet Rose, Scott D.
Kim, Dong-Ho
Amarzguioui, Mohammed
Heidel, Jeremy D.
Collingwood, Michael A.
Davis, Mark E.
Rossi, John J.
Behlke, Mark A.
author_sort Rose, Scott D.
collection PubMed
description Synthetic RNA duplexes that are substrates for Dicer are potent triggers of RNA interference (RNAi). Blunt 27mer duplexes can be up to 100-fold more potent than traditional 21mer duplexes (1). Not all 27mer duplexes show increased potency. Evaluation of the products of in vitro dicing reactions using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry reveals that a variety of products can be produced by Dicer cleavage. Use of asymmetric duplexes having a single 2-base 3′-overhang restricts the heterogeneity that results from dicing. Inclusion of DNA residues at the ends of blunt duplexes also limits heterogeneity. Combination of asymmetric 2-base 3′-overhang with 3′-DNA residues on the blunt end result in a duplex form which directs dicing to predictably yield a single primary cleavage product. It is therefore possible to design a 27mer duplex which is processed by Dicer to yield a specific, desired 21mer species. Using this strategy, two different 27mers can be designed that result in the same 21mer after dicing, one where the 3′-overhang resides on the antisense (AS) strand and dicing proceeds to the ‘right’ (‘R’) and one where the 3′-overhang resides on the sense (S) strand and dicing proceeds to the ‘left’ (‘L’). Interestingly, the ‘R’ version of the asymmetric 27mer is generally more potent in reducing target gene levels than the ‘L’ version 27mer. Strand targeting experiments show asymmetric strand utilization between the two different 27mer forms, with the ‘R’ form favoring S strand and the ‘L’ form favoring AS strand silencing. Thus, Dicer processing confers functional polarity within the RNAi pathway.
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spelling pubmed-11807462005-07-27 Functional polarity is introduced by Dicer processing of short substrate RNAs Rose, Scott D. Kim, Dong-Ho Amarzguioui, Mohammed Heidel, Jeremy D. Collingwood, Michael A. Davis, Mark E. Rossi, John J. Behlke, Mark A. Nucleic Acids Res Article Synthetic RNA duplexes that are substrates for Dicer are potent triggers of RNA interference (RNAi). Blunt 27mer duplexes can be up to 100-fold more potent than traditional 21mer duplexes (1). Not all 27mer duplexes show increased potency. Evaluation of the products of in vitro dicing reactions using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry reveals that a variety of products can be produced by Dicer cleavage. Use of asymmetric duplexes having a single 2-base 3′-overhang restricts the heterogeneity that results from dicing. Inclusion of DNA residues at the ends of blunt duplexes also limits heterogeneity. Combination of asymmetric 2-base 3′-overhang with 3′-DNA residues on the blunt end result in a duplex form which directs dicing to predictably yield a single primary cleavage product. It is therefore possible to design a 27mer duplex which is processed by Dicer to yield a specific, desired 21mer species. Using this strategy, two different 27mers can be designed that result in the same 21mer after dicing, one where the 3′-overhang resides on the antisense (AS) strand and dicing proceeds to the ‘right’ (‘R’) and one where the 3′-overhang resides on the sense (S) strand and dicing proceeds to the ‘left’ (‘L’). Interestingly, the ‘R’ version of the asymmetric 27mer is generally more potent in reducing target gene levels than the ‘L’ version 27mer. Strand targeting experiments show asymmetric strand utilization between the two different 27mer forms, with the ‘R’ form favoring S strand and the ‘L’ form favoring AS strand silencing. Thus, Dicer processing confers functional polarity within the RNAi pathway. Oxford University Press 2005 2005-07-26 /pmc/articles/PMC1180746/ /pubmed/16049023 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki732 Text en © The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved
spellingShingle Article
Rose, Scott D.
Kim, Dong-Ho
Amarzguioui, Mohammed
Heidel, Jeremy D.
Collingwood, Michael A.
Davis, Mark E.
Rossi, John J.
Behlke, Mark A.
Functional polarity is introduced by Dicer processing of short substrate RNAs
title Functional polarity is introduced by Dicer processing of short substrate RNAs
title_full Functional polarity is introduced by Dicer processing of short substrate RNAs
title_fullStr Functional polarity is introduced by Dicer processing of short substrate RNAs
title_full_unstemmed Functional polarity is introduced by Dicer processing of short substrate RNAs
title_short Functional polarity is introduced by Dicer processing of short substrate RNAs
title_sort functional polarity is introduced by dicer processing of short substrate rnas
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1180746/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16049023
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gki732
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