RNAi knock-down mice: an emerging technology for post-genomic functional genetics

RNA interference (RNAi) has been extensively used for sequence-specific silencing of gene function in mammalian cells. The latest major breakthrough in the application of RNAi technology came from experiments demonstrating RNAi-mediated gene repression in mice and rats. After more than two decades o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cytogenetic and Genome Research 2004-01, Vol.105 (2-4), p.412-421
Hauptverfasser: Prawitt, D., Brixel, L., Spangenberg, C., Eshkind, L., Heck, R., Oesch, F., Zabel, B., Bockamp, E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:RNA interference (RNAi) has been extensively used for sequence-specific silencing of gene function in mammalian cells. The latest major breakthrough in the application of RNAi technology came from experiments demonstrating RNAi-mediated gene repression in mice and rats. After more than two decades of functional mouse research aimed at developing and continuously improving transgenic and knock-out technology, the advent of RNAi knock-down mice represents a valuable new alternative for studying gene function in vivo. In this review we provide some basic insight as to how RNAi can induce gene silencing to then focus on recent findings concerning the applicability of RNAi for regulating gene function in the mouse. Reviewed topics will include delivery methods for RNAi-mediating molecules, a comparison between traditional knock-out and innovative transgenic RNAi technology and the generation of graded RNAi knock-down phenotypes. Apart from the exciting possibilities RNAi provides for studying gene function in mice, we discuss several caveats and limitations to be considered. Finally, we present prospective strategies as to how RNAi technology might be applied for generating conditional and tissue-restricted knock-down mice.   
ISSN:1424-8581
1424-859X
DOI:10.1159/000078214