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Science
Technology
RNA-mediated Interference (RNAi):
The Ultimate Gene Silencing Technology

RNAi, or RNA-mediated interference, is the new method of choice for achieving targeted gene silencing in a wide range of experimental systems from plants to human cells. Previous gene silencing methods such as antisense and ribozyme-based approaches suffered from poor experimental reproducibility, lack of robustness and limited upscalability. Not only has RNAi largely overcome these hurdles, it has in fact revolutionized the process of identifying and functionally characterizing new genes, thereby offering the best new functional genomics tool available for realizing the full promise of the Human Genome Project.

Initially discovered in 1998 by Fire and Mello's breakthrough work in the nematode C. elegans, itself following several related observations from other groups studying plants and fungi, RNAi is now recognized as part of a highly catalytic gene regulation system found in most organisms from plants to human, and thought to have evolved at least in part as a defence mechanism against molecular pathogens. For this landmark discovery, Mello and Fire were honored with the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine.

The pathway mounts a powerful cellular response to the presence of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) molecules, which, in nature, would most likely derive from active transposons, viruses, or endogenously-encoded microRNAs. These dsRNAs are processed and used by the cell's RNAi machinery as targeting co-factors to identify complementary messenger RNA (mRNA) molecules, which are then completely degraded, thereby silencing the expression of the corresponding gene.

Thus, by introducing dsRNAs containing targeted gene sequences into cells or organisms, the RNAi pathway can be experimentally "harnessed" to silence essentially any gene of interest with tightly controlled specificity. The detailed analysis of resulting loss-of-functions phenotypes represents arguably the most direct and most readily interpretable method for experimentally elucidating the cellular function of genes in most systems today.

RNAi technology offers an unprecedented combination of:
  • High silencing efficacy
  • Nucleotide sequence-based targeting specificity
  • Excellent reproducibility and robustness
  • Scalability for large scale screening studies
  • Wide cross-species applicability


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