Small interfering RNA-mediated gene silencing in T lymphocytes

Posted by lyu | Created: 15 Jun 2009 | Last Modified: 09 Jul 2009
Printer-friendly versionSend to friend
Authors: 
McManus MT, Haines BB, Dillon CP, Whitehurst CE, van Parijs L, Chen J, Sharp PA.
Journal: 
J Immunol.
Publication Date: 
November 15, 2002
Institutions: 
University of California, San Francisco
Abstract: 
Introduction of small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) into a cell can cause a specific interference of gene expression known as RNA interference (RNAi). However, RNAi activity in lymphocytes and in normal primary mammalian cells has not been thoroughly demonstrated. In this report, we show that siRNAs complementary to CD4 and CD8alpha specifically reduce surface expression of these coreceptors and their respective mRNA in a thymoma cell line model. We show that RNAi activity is only caused by a subset of siRNAs complementary to the mRNA target and that ineffective siRNAs can compete with effective siRNAs. Using primary differentiated T lymphocytes, we provide the first evidence of siRNA-mediated RNAi gene silencing in normal nontransformed somatic mammalian lymphocytes.
pdfs and supplementary materials: