1. 3' UTR seed matches, but not overall identity, are associated with RNAi off-targets
- Author
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Emily M. Anderson, Scott Baskerville, Diane Ilsley-Tyree, Devin Leake, Anastasia Khvorova, Kathryn Robinson, Angela Reynolds, Jon Karpilow, Yuriy Fedorov, Amanda Birmingham, Elena Maksimova, and William Marshall
- Subjects
Untranslated region ,Small interfering RNA ,Silicon ,Databases, Factual ,Base Pair Mismatch ,Cell Survival ,Trans-acting siRNA ,Biology ,Transfection ,Biochemistry ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Cell Line ,RNA interference ,Gene silencing ,Humans ,Gene Silencing ,RNA, Messenger ,RNA, Small Interfering ,Molecular Biology ,3' Untranslated Regions ,Base Pairing ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Genetics ,Three prime untranslated region ,Gene Expression Profiling ,RNA ,Computational Biology ,Numerical Analysis, Computer-Assisted ,Cell Biology ,RNA silencing ,Sequence Alignment ,Biotechnology ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
Off-target gene silencing can present a notable challenge in the interpretation of data from large-scale RNA interference (RNAi) screens. We performed a detailed analysis of off-targeted genes identified by expression profiling of human cells transfected with small interfering RNA (siRNA). Contrary to common assumption, analysis of the subsequent off-target gene database showed that overall identity makes little or no contribution to determining whether the expression of a particular gene will be affected by a given siRNA, except for near-perfect matches. Instead, off-targeting is associated with the presence of one or more perfect 3' untranslated region (UTR) matches with the hexamer or heptamer seed region (positions 2-7 or 2-8) of the antisense strand of the siRNA. These findings have strong implications for future siRNA design and the application of RNAi in high-throughput screening and therapeutic development.
- Published
- 2005