Abstract
siRNAs mediate sequence-specific gene silencing in cultured mammalian cells but also silence unintended transcripts. Many siRNA off-target transcripts match the guide-strand "seed region," similar to the way microRNAs match their target sites. The extent to which this seed-matched, microRNA-like, off-target silencing affects the specificity of therapeutic siRNAs in vivo is currently unknown. Here, we compare microRNA-like off-target regulations in mouse liver in vivo with those seen in cell culture for a series of therapeutic candidate siRNAs targeting Apolipoprotein B (APOB). Each siRNA triggered regulation of consistent microRNA-like off-target transcripts in mouse livers and in cultured mouse liver tumor cells. In contrast, there was only random overlap between microRNA-like off-target transcripts from cultured human and mouse liver tumor cells. Therefore, siRNA therapeutics may trigger microRNA-like silencing of many unintended targets in vivo, and the potential toxicities caused by these off-target gene regulations cannot be accurately assessed in rodent models. Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Copyright © 2009 RNA Society.
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Burchard, J., Jackson, A. L., Malkov, V., Needham, R. H. V., Tan, Y., Bartz, S. R., … Linsley, P. S. (2009). MicroRNA-like off-target transcript regulation by siRNAs is species specific. RNA, 15(2), 308–315. https://doi.org/10.1261/rna.1326809
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