Conditional suppression of cellular genes: lentivirus vector-mediated drug-inducible RNA interference

M Wiznerowicz, D Trono - Journal of virology, 2003 - Am Soc Microbiol
Journal of virology, 2003Am Soc Microbiol
ABSTRACT RNA interference has emerged as a powerful technique to downregulate the
expression of specific genes in cells and in animals, thus opening new perspectives in fields
ranging from developmental genetics to molecular therapeutics. Here, we describe a
method that significantly expands the potential of RNA interference by permitting the
conditional suppression of genes in mammalian cells. Within a lentivirus vector background,
we subjected the polymerase III promoter-dependent production of small interfering RNAs to …
Abstract
RNA interference has emerged as a powerful technique to downregulate the expression of specific genes in cells and in animals, thus opening new perspectives in fields ranging from developmental genetics to molecular therapeutics. Here, we describe a method that significantly expands the potential of RNA interference by permitting the conditional suppression of genes in mammalian cells. Within a lentivirus vector background, we subjected the polymerase III promoter-dependent production of small interfering RNAs to doxycycline-controllable transcriptional repression. The resulting system can achieve the highly efficient and completely drug-inducible knockdown of cellular genes. As lentivirus vectors can stably transduce a wide variety of targets both in vitro and in vivo and can be used to generate transgenic animals, the present system should have broad applications.
American Society for Microbiology