Silencing efficacy prediction: A retrospective study on target mRNA features

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Abstract

Post-transcriptional gene silencing is a widely used method to suppress gene expression. Unfortunately only a portion of siRNAs do successfully reduce gene expression. Target mRNA secondary structures and siRNA-mRNA thermodynamic features are believed to contribute to the silencing activity. However, there is still an open discussion as to what determines siRNA efficacy. In this retrospective study, we analysed the target accessibility comparing very high (VH) compared with low (L) efficacy siRNA sequences obtained from the siRecords Database. We determined the contribution of mRNA target local secondary structures on silencing efficacy. Both the univariableandthe multivariable logistic regression evidenced no relationship between siRNA efficacy and mRNA target secondary structures. Moreover, none of the thermodynamic and sequence-base parameterstaken into consideration (H-b index, δG°overall, δG°duplex, δG°break-target and GC%) was associated with siRNA efficacy. We found that features believed to be predictive of silencing efficacy are not confirmed to be so when externally evaluated in a large heterogeneous sample. Although it was proposed that silencing efficacy could be influenced by local target accessibility we show that this could be not generalizable because of the diversity of experimental setting that may not be representative of biological systems especially in view of the many local protein factors, usually not taken into consideration, which could hamper the silencing process.

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Pascut, D., Bedogni, G., & Tiribelli, C. (2015). Silencing efficacy prediction: A retrospective study on target mRNA features. Bioscience Reports, 35. https://doi.org/10.1042/BSR20140147

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