Merging molecular imaging and RNA interference: Early experience in live animals

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Abstract

The rapid development of non-invasive imaging techniques and imaging reporters coincided with the enthusiastic response that the introduction of RNA interference (RNAi) techniques created in the research community. Imaging in experimental animals provides quantitative or semi-quantitative information regarding the biodistribution of small interfering RNAs and the levels of gene interference (i.e., knockdown of the target mRNA) in living animals. In this review we give a brief summary of the first imaging findings that have potential for accelerating the development and testing of new approaches that explore RNAi as a method for achieving loss-of-function effects in vivo and as a promising therapeutic tool. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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APA

Bogdanov, A. A. (2008, July 1). Merging molecular imaging and RNA interference: Early experience in live animals. Journal of Cellular Biochemistry. https://doi.org/10.1002/jcb.21689

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