Experimental validation of the importance of seed complement frequency to siRNA specificity

  1. Emily M. Anderson,
  2. Amanda Birmingham,
  3. Scott Baskerville,
  4. Angela Reynolds,
  5. Elena Maksimova,
  6. Devin Leake,
  7. Yuriy Fedorov,
  8. Jon Karpilow, and
  9. Anastasia Khvorova1
  1. Thermo Fisher Scientific, Dharmacon Products, Lafayette, Colorado 80026, USA

Abstract

Pairing between the hexamer seed region of a small interfering RNA (siRNA) guide strand (nucleotides 2–7) and complementary sequences in the 3′ UTR of mature transcripts has been implicated as an important element in off-target gene regulation and false positive phenotypes. To better understand the association between seed sequences and off-target profiles we performed an analysis of all possible (4096) hexamers and identified a nonuniform distribution of hexamer frequencies across the 3′ UTR transcriptome. Subsequent microarray analysis of cells transfected with siRNAs having seeds with low, medium, or high seed complement frequencies (SCFs) revealed that duplexes with low SCFs generally induced fewer off-targets and off-target phenotypes than molecules with more abundant 3′ UTR complements. These findings provide the first experimentally validated strategy for designing siRNAs with enhanced specificity and allow for more accurate interpretation of high throughput screening data generated with existing siRNA/shRNA collections.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • 1 Present address: Advirna LLC, 4550 Squires, Boulder, CO 80305, USA.

  • Reprint request to: Anastasia Khvorova, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Dharmacon Products, Lafayette, CO 80026, USA; e-mail: anastasia.khvorova{at}gmail.com; fax: (303) 499-6519.

  • Article published online ahead of print. Article and publication date are at http://www.rnajournal.org/cgi/doi/10.1261/rna.704708.

    • Received June 27, 2007.
    • Accepted October 24, 2007.
  • Freely available online through the open access option.

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