4.5 Article

Off-target effects of RNAi correlate with the mismatch rate between dsRNA and non-target mRNA

Journal

RNA BIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 11, Pages 1747-1759

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15476286.2020.1868680

Keywords

RNA interference; off-target effect; sequence identity; RNAi efficiency; dsRNA specificity; risk assessment

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31672053]

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Research has identified rules governing the specificity of dsRNA triggering RNAi against target genes, and by designing dsRNA that meets certain conditions, specificity and efficiency can be optimized, paving the way for the rational application of RNAi in pest control.
RNAi is a potent technique for the knockdown of target genes. However, its potential off-target effects limit the widespread applications in both reverse genetic analysis and genetic manipulation. Previous efforts have uncovered rules underlying specificity of siRNA-based silencing, which has broad applications in humans, but the basis for specificity of dsRNAs, which are better suited for use as insecticides, is poorly understood. Here, we investigated the rules governing dsRNA specificity. Mutational analyses showed that dsRNAs with >80% sequence identity with target genes triggered RNAi efficiently. dsRNAs with >= 16 bp segments of perfectly matched sequence or >26 bp segments of almost perfectly matched sequence with one or two mismatches scarcely distributed (single mismatches inserted between >= 5 bp matching segments or mismatched couplets inserted between >= 8 bp matching segments) also able to trigger RNAi. Using these parameters to predict off-target risk, dsRNAs can be designed to optimize specificity and efficiency, paving the way to the widespread, rational application of RNAi in pest control.

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