Kashikant Yadav presented on siRNA (short interfering RNA). siRNA is 20-25 base pairs long, similar to miRNA, and operates in the RNA interference pathway by degrading mRNA with complementary sequences, preventing translation. There are three main methods of siRNA synthesis: chemical synthesis, in vitro transcription, and digestion of long dsRNA by RNAase III or Dicer. siRNA has significance for protecting against viruses, maintaining genome stability, and offers a new tool to specifically repress genes. Potential applications include testing gene function, target validation, pathway analysis, and developing siRNA therapeutics.
Overview of siRNA, its definition, and its role in RNA interference, including mechanisms that degrade mRNA to inhibit gene expression.
Different methods of synthesizing siRNA: chemical synthesis, in vitro transcription, and RNAase III/Dicer digestion, with pros and cons for each approach.
The importance of RNAi in viral protection, genome stability, and gene therapy, alongside applications in research and therapeutics.
Introduction
• Also asshort interfering RNA or silencing
RNA
• Is a class of double-stranded RNA molecules
• 20-25 base pairs in length
• similar to miRNA
• operating within the RNA interference (RNAi)
pathway by the enzyme Dicer
3.
• It interfereswith the expression of specific
genes with complementary nucleotide
sequences by degrading mRNA after
transcription, resulting in no translation.
4.
RNA Interference (RNAI)
•Biological process in which RNA molecules
inhibit gene expression ,typically by causing
the destruction of specific mRNA molecules.
• Phenomenon in which dsRNA suppresses
expression of a target protein by stimulating
the specific degradation of the target mRNA
Chemical Synthesis
• Commercialsynthesis.
• Expensive process.
• Must screen siRNAs to identify an effective
one.
• Synthesis can easily be scaled up.
• siRNAs can be labeled for identification.
8.
Best for:
• Studiesthat require large amounts of a defined
siRNA sequence
Not suitable for:
• Screening siRNA sequences
• Long term studies
9.
In vitro transcriptionof siRNA
• In vitro transcribe sense and antisense RNA
strands from dsDNA template; hybridized RNA
strands to create siRNAs.
• Fast turn around.
• Lower concentration.
• Must screen siRNAs to identify an effective one.
• siRNAs can be labeled.
11.
RNAase III/DICER digestion
•Cocktail of several siRNAs generated by
RNAase III/Dicer digestion of long dsRNA
• Leaves same overhang characteristics
• No need to screen for effective siRNA
• SiRNA cocktail can be labeled
• Does not identify single effective siRNA
sequence
• Non-specific effects
12.
siRNA cocktails madewith RNase III
• Complementary RNA strands (100-500nt)
transcribed from dsDNA template and then
hybridized to long dsRNA
• DNase and RNase used to remove DNA
template and unhybridized RNA strands
• RNase III digests dsRNA into population of
12-15mer dsRNA that fuction as siRNAs
• Clean up.
14.
Significance of theRNAi
1. RNAi protects against viral infection.
2. RNAi secures genome stability by keeping mobile elements
silent.
3. RNAi-like mechnisms repress protein synthesis and
regulate the development of organisms.
4. RNAi-like mechanisms keep chromatin condensed and
suppress transcription.
5. RNAi offers a new experimental tool to repress genes
specifically.
6. RNAi might be a useful approach in future gene therapy.