Title: RNA interference in specific gene silencing ('knockdown')
1RNA interference in specific gene silencing
('knockdown')
- Christopher V. Jones
- Jason Carter
2RNA Interference
- mRNA transcribed from DNA encodes for a protein
expressed by a certain gene - The presence of certain double-stranded RNA
(dsRNA) interferes with expression of a gene by
interfering w/ the translation of its mRNA - dsRNAs direct the creation of small interfering
RNAs (siRNAs) which target RNA-degrading enzymes
(RNAses) to destroy mRNA transcripts
complementary to the siRNAs
3Small interfering RNA (siRNA)
- dsRNA (usually 21-nt) with 2-nt overhangs on
either end, including a 5' phosphate group and a
3' hydroxy (-OH) group - dsRNA enters RNAi pathway via enzyme Dicer
producing siRNA - siRNA molecules associate with a group of
proteins termed the RNA-induced silencing complex
(RISC), and directs the RISC to the target mRNA
4(No Transcript)
5Applications
- Typically, a single mRNA translates about 5,000
protein copies - RNAi can be used experimentally to "knockout"
genes in organisms to help determine gene
function - dsRNAs that trigger RNAi may be usable as drugs
to treat genetic disorders or cancers - dsRNA can repress essential genes in pathogens or
viruses that are dissimilar from any host genes
6Advantages
- Broad Applicability Diseases for which abnormal
gene function is a cause or a contributing factor
are potentially treatable with RNA interference - Therapeutic Precision Side effects associated
with traditional drugs may be reduced or avoided
by using RNAi-based drugs designed to inhibit
expression of only a targeted gene and no others - Target RNA Destruction Most drugs only
temporarily prevent targeted protein function,
RNAi-based drugs are designed to destroy the
target RNA stopping undesirable protein
production required for disease progression
7Treatable diseases Macular Degeneration
- Eye disease caused by the growth of excess blood
vessels - Caused by protein VEGF that promotes blood vessel
growth - Vessels leak, clouding vision
- dsRNAs can be delivered locally via injection
- clinical trial of two dozen patients in 2004
- In two months
- ¼ improved, ¾ stabilized
8Treatable diseases HIV
- In 2002, scientists at MIT accounted they could
interrupt various steps in the HIV life cycle
using RNAi in cell cultures - Mutates and evolves resistance too rapidly for
any single target mRNA - Molecular biologists at Colorado State University
have engineered RNAi therapy aiming at multiple
HIV genes - Clinical trials may start as early as 2006
9Treatable diseases Cancer
- involves mutant genes that promote uncontrolled
cell growth - researchers have silenced more than a dozen known
cancer-causing genes with RNAi in cell cultures - delivery poses the key challenge for RNAi
therapies how to reach and penetrate tumors - Could stop production of P-glycoprotein which
purges existing chemotherapy drugs from tumors,
thus enhancing existing treatments
10siRNA Prediction
- Given a target gene, how to design an siRNA to
knock it down? - Select a candidate subsequence from the target
gene - Not all subsequences are recognizable by Dicer
- Arbitrary subsequence may knockdown unrelated
gene(s) - Identify siRNA patterns that are effective
through experimentation - Search entire genome to eliminate subsequences
with off-target specificity
11siRNA Prediction Method fromsiDirect highly
effective target-specific siRNA design software
for mammalian RNA interference, (Naito, Yamada,
Ui-Tei, Morishita, Saigo, 2004)
- Studies of several genes led to these heuristics
- A/U at the 5' end of the antisense strand
- G/C at the 5' end of the sense strand
- AU richness in the 5' terminal 1/3rd of the
antisense strand - the absence of any G/C stretch exceeding 9 bp in
length
12siRNA Prediction Method fromRational siRNA
design for RNA interference (Reynolds, Leake,
Boese, Scaringe, Marshall, Khvorova, 2004)
- At least 7 points are required to be scored as
effective siRNA - 30-52 GC content Add 1 point
- Three or more A/Us at positions 15-19 (sense) -
Add 1 point for each A/U for a total up to 5
points. At least 3 points are required. - A at position 19 (sense) - Add 1 point
- A at position 3 (sense) - Add 1 point
- U at position 10 (sense) - Add 1 point
- No G/C at position 19 (sense) - Subtract 1 point
for not satisfying this criterion. - No G at position 13 (sense) - Subtract 1 point
for not satisfying this criterion.
13Filtering out off-target hits
- Once we have predicted potentially effective
candidate siRNAs, we must search the entire
genome for off-target matches - Exhaustive search is expensive, but accurate
- Smith-Waterman algorithm
- Approximate search BLAST algorithm
- Genes have introns that are spliced out of the
mRNA - Alternative-splicing means exons are spliced
several ways we must search these areas also
14Exhaustive vs. Approximate search
- The human genome contains 3B nt
- Only 1.5 encodes proteins as genes
- Must search 45M nt, exon overlap sites, and
alternative exon overlaps - Must repeat search for each candidate siRNA
- Exhaustive search is O(nm) time and space
complexity - Smith-Waterman is a dynamic algorithm that finds
optimal local alignment using a scoring system, a
substitution matrix, and gap-scoring - Approximate search BLAST can run 50 times faster
using heuristic approach
15Approximate Search -Basic Local Alignment Search
Tool
- BLAST breaks a search into stages
- Searches for short matches of fixed length W
between query and database - If there is a matching word W, performs an
ungapped alignment between the query and database
sequence, extending the match in each direction - High-scoring matches then subjected to a gapped
alignment between the query sequence and the
database sequence using a variation of the
Smith-Waterman algorithm - Statistically significant matches are returned
- Potential matches may get discarded due to
heuristics
16siRNA specificity
- siRNA matches to any other gene of as few as 11
residues can lead to off-target silencing - High specificity has been observed with siRNAs
that have at least 3 mismatches to all other
genes - Would be considered to have a mismatch tolerance
of 3 - Higher mismatch tolerance indicates higher
specificity - Provides means to rank resulting siRNA candidates
for study
17Conclusions
- Hundreds of successful experiments in cell
cultures, and dozens in lab animals - siRNA delivery methods major hurdle
- siRNA design will mature through competing
prediction heuristics and better characterization
of the RNAi machinery - As RNAi databases mature, novel biocomputing
approaches are likely - Optimistic many RNAi therapies will enter
clinical trials in next five years - Possible FDA approvals within the next decade
18WebTools
- siDirect
- http//design.rnai.jp/
- Whitehead Institute siRNA
- http//jura.wi.mit.edu/bioc/siRNAext/
- Wistar Bioinformatics Gene-specific siRNA
selector - http//bioinfo.wistar.upenn.edu/siRNA/siRNA.htm
- Ambion siRNA design and databases
- http//www.ambion.com/techlib/misc/siRNA_tools.htm
l - Web RNAi databases
- http//www.rnainterference.org/
- http//nematoda.bio.nyu.edu/cgi-bin/rnai/index.cgi
19Bibliography
- Review Gene Silencing in mammals by small
interfering RNAs, (McManus, Sharp) Genetics Vol.
3 Oct. 2002, 737-747 - Rational siRNA design for RNA interference
(Reynolds, Leake, Boese, Scaringe, Marshall,
Khvorova) Nature Biotechnology Vol. 223 Mar.
2004, 326-330. - siDirect highly effective target-specific siRNA
design software for mammalian RNA interference,
(Naito, Yamada, Ui-Tei, Morishita, Saigo) Nucleic
Acids Research Vol. 32 2004, 124-129. - Guidelines for the selection of highly effective
siRNA sequences for mammalian and chick RNA
interference, (Ui-Tei, Naito, Takahashi,
Haraguchi, Okhi-Hamazaki, Juni, Ueda, Saigo,
2004) Nucleic Acids Research Vol. 323 2004 - Potent and Persistent in-vivo anti-HBV activity
of chemically modified siRNAs, (Morrisey,
Lockridge, et. al.) Nature Biotechnology July 2004