Publication | Open Access
Cytoplasmic and Nuclear Retained DMPK mRNAs Are Targets for RNA Interference in Myotonic Dystrophy Cells
112
Citations
32
References
2005
Year
Transcriptional RegulationSynthetic SirnasDevelopmental BiologyRna InterferenceRna BiologyDmpk GeneMyotonic Dystrophy CellsSmall RnaGene ExpressionMedicineCell BiologyCellular PhysiologyRna ProcessingNon-coding Rna
Small interfering RNA (siRNA) duplexes induce the specific cleavage of target RNAs in mammalian cells. Their involvement in down-regulation of gene expression is termed RNA interference (RNAi). It is widely believed that RNAi predominates in the cytoplasm. We report here the co-existence of cytoplasmic and nuclear RNAi phenomena in primary human myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) cells by targeting myotonic dystrophy protein kinase (DMPK) mRNAs. Heterozygote DM1 myoblasts from a human DM1 fetus produce a nuclear retained mutant DMPK transcript with large CUG repeats ( approximately 3,200) from one allele of the DMPK gene and a wild type transcript with 18 CUG repeats, thus providing for both a nuclear and cytoplasmic expression profile to be evaluated. We demonstrate here for the first time down-regulation of the endogenous nuclear retained mutant DMPK mRNAs targeted with lentivirus-delivered short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs). This nuclear RNAi(-like) phenomenon was not observed when synthetic siRNAs were delivered by cationic lipids, suggesting either a link between processing of the shRNA and nuclear import or a separate pathway for processing shRNAs in the nuclei. Our observation of simultaneous RNAi on both cytoplasmic and nuclear retained DMPK has important implications for post-transcriptional gene regulation in both compartments of mammalian cells.
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