Author:
'T HOEN PETER A.C.,OUT RUUD,COMMANDEUR JAN N.M.,VERMEULEN NICO P.E.,VAN BATENBURG F.H.D. (EKE),MANOHARAN MUTHIAH,VAN BERKEL THEO J.C.,BIESSEN ERIK A.L.,BIJSTERBOSCH MARTIN K.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to identify functional antisense
oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) against the rat glutathione
S-transferase Mu (GSTM) isoforms, GSTM1 and
GSTM2. These antisense ODNs would enable the study of the physiological
consequences of GSTM deficiency. Because it has been suggested that the
effectiveness of antisense ODNs is dependent on the secondary mRNA
structures of their target sites, we made mRNA secondary structure
predictions with two software packages, Mfold and STAR. The two programs
produced only marginally similar structures, which can probably be
attributed to differences in the algorithms used. The effectiveness of a set
of 18 antisense ODNs was evaluated with a cell-free
transcription/translation assay, and their activity was correlated with the
predicted secondary RNA structures. Four phosphodiester ODNs specific for
GSTM1, two ODNs specific for GSTM2, and four ODNs targeted at both GSTM
isoforms were found to be potent, sequence-specific, and RNase H-dependent
inhibitors of protein expression. The IC50 value of the
most potent ODN was approximately 100 nM. Antisense ODNs targeted against
regions that were predicted by STAR to be predominantly single stranded were
more potent than antisense ODNs against double-stranded regions. Such a
correlation was not found for the Mfold prediction. Our data suggest that
simulation of the local folding of RNA facilitates the discovery of potent
antisense sequences. In conclusion, we selected several promising antisense
sequences, which, when synthesized as biologically stable oligonucleotides,
can be applied for study of the physiological impact of reduced GSTM
expression.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
9 articles.
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