Publication | Open Access
Anti-mRNA: specific inhibition of translation of single mRNA molecules.
121
Citations
14
References
1984
Year
Specific InhibitionInhibitory ActivityProtein ExpressionMedicineNatural SciencesSingle RapidSingle SpeciesProtein BiosynthesisMolecular BiologySynthetic BiologyMrna MoleculeAntisense TherapyRna TransportGene ExpressionPharmacologyCell BiologyGenome EditingProtein Synthesis
A plasmid was constructed to generate RNA complementary to the beta-galactosidase mRNA under control of the phage lambda PL promoter. When this anti-mRNA was produced, synthesis of beta-galactosidase was dramatically inhibited (98%). Syntheses of galactoside permease and transacetylase, whose coding sequences are downstream of the beta-galactosidase coding region, are inhibited to a lesser degree, 80% and 55%, respectively. The generation of anti-mRNA that can be targeted to inhibit a single species of mRNA molecule within cells provides a potent mechanism by which specific transcripts can be translationally inactivated. This can be used to determine the function of proteins as well as to select cloned genes in a single rapid and convenient step.
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