RNA interference by expression of short-interfering RNAs and hairpin RNAs in mammalian cells

University of Michigan

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Duplexes of 21-nt RNAs, known as short-interfering RNAs (siRNAs), efficiently inhibit gene expression by RNA interference (RNAi) when introduced into mammalian cells. We show that siRNAs can be synthesized by in vitro transcription with T7 RNA polymerase, providing an economical alternative to chemical synthesis of siRNAs. By using this method, we show that short hairpin siRNAs can function like siRNA duplexes to inhibit gene expression in a sequence-specific manner. Further, we find that hairpin siRNAs or siRNAs expressed from an RNA polymerase III vector based on the mouse U6 RNA promoter can effectively inhibit gene expression in mammalian cells. U6-driven hairpin siRNAs dramatically reduced the expression…

Citation impact

1,039
total citations
FWCI
45.66
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100%
References
38
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Small interfering RNA
  • RNA interference
  • Trans-acting siRNA
  • Small hairpin RNA
  • Biology
  • RNA
  • Gene expression
  • Cell biology
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