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An RNA Interference (RNAi) Toolkit and Its Utility for Functional Genetic Analysis of ()

Overview
Journal Genes (Basel)
Publisher MDPI
Date 2023 Jan 21
PMID 36672832
Authors
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Abstract

RNA interference (RNAi) is a powerful tool whose efficacy against a broad range of targets enables functional genetic tests individually or systematically. However, the RNAi pathway has been lost in evolution by a variety of eukaryotes including most Leishmania sp. RNAi was retained in species of the subgenus , and here we describe the development, optimization, and application of RNAi tools to the study of . () (). We developed vectors facilitating generation of long-hairpin or "stem-loop" (StL) RNAi knockdown constructs, using Gateway site-specific recombinase technology. A survey of applications of RNAi in included genes interspersed within multigene tandem arrays such as dihydropteridine reductase (), a potential target or modulator of antifolate sensitivity. Other tests include genes involved in cell differentiation and amastigote proliferation (), and essential genes of the intraflagellar transport (IFT) pathway. We tested a range of stem lengths targeting the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HGPRT) and reporter firefly luciferase (LUC) genes and found that the efficacy of RNAi increased with stem length, and fell off greatly below about 128 nt. We used the StL length dependency to establish a useful 'hypomorphic' approach not possible with other gene ablation strategies, with shorter stems yielding viable cells with compromised flagellar morphology. We showed that co-selection for RNAi against adenine phosphoryl transferase () using 4-aminopyrazolpyrimidine (APP) could increase the efficacy of RNAi against reporter constructs, a finding that may facilitate improvements in future work. Thus, for many genes, RNAi provides a useful tool for studying gene function with some unique advantages.

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