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        在转染哺乳动物细胞时:温度是个影响因素!请删除前文

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        A hypothermic-temperature-sensitive gene silencing by the mammalian RNAi
        Takashi Kameda, Kenji Ikegami, Yang Liu, Kunihiko Terada, and Toshihiro Sugiyamundefined
        Department of Biochemistry, Akita University School of Medicine 1-1-1 Hondo, Akita 010-8543, Japan
        Received 12 January 2004
        Abstract
        RNA interference (RNAi) has been attracting a great deal of attention. This pathway is highly conserved among most eukaryotes
        and believed to be important for antiviral reactions and epigenetic gene regulation. Because a temperature-sensitive RNAi was
        reported in both plant and insect systems, suggesting its evolutional conservation, we analyzed the effect of different temperatures on
        mammalian RNAi, targeting the ectopic gene expression, and detected suppression at hypothermic temperatures. This phenomenon
        could be critical and useful to control ectopic and internal gene expressions by RNAi.
         2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
        Keywords: Mammalian RNAi; Temperature biology

        RNAi is a nucleotide sequence-specific RNA degradation
        pathway, reactive to double-stranded RNA [1–
        3]. A pathway homologous to RNAi is highly conserved
        among most eukaryotes. While the biochemical mechanism
        of RNAi is yet to be fully revealed, this pathway
        is composed of several steps, including the production
        of 21–25 nt short-interfering RNA (siRNA) from
        dsRNA by the RNase III-like enzyme complex (DICER),
        and the sequence-specific degradation of the
        target RNA by the nuclease complex (RISC). In some
        organisms, amplification of the siRNA by the RNAdependent
        RNA polymerase (RdRP) and intercellular
        transport of the siRNA (systemic pathway) intensify the
        reaction. The RNAi in eukaryotes is thought to be an
        anti-viral reaction as well as an epigenetic chromosomal
        regulator, involved in the suppression of internal
        transposon [1–5].
        Most biochemical reactions are sensitive to temperature.
        In Drosophila, temperature-dependent gene
        silencing by RNAi had been reported [6]. In this case,
        the RNAi effect on Drosophila sex differentiation observed
        at 29 C was strongly inhibited at 22 C. A
        temperature-sensitive RNAi effect as an anti-viral reaction
        was also reported in the plant system [7]. In
        this case, the sensitive temperature was below 24 C
        with disruption of the siRNA generation. The temperature
        dependency of RNAi might also be highly
        conserved among eukaryotes. And, we empirically
        have noticed that culturing mammalian cells in a
        moderate hypothermic temperature often supports the
        ectopic gene expression (a confirmative experiment on
        the expression of the green fluorescent protein (GFP))
        in the HEK 293 and NIH-3T3 cells is indicated in
        Fig. 1A). We expected that the hypothermic temperature
        also suppresses the mammalian RNAi to support
        the ectopic gene expression, because the
        suppression of RNAi greatly enhances the ectopic gene
        expression in plant system [7,8]. In this report, we
        tried to analyze the effect of different temperatures, on
        the efficacy of RNAi in cultured mammalian cells,
        and found a suppressive effect at hypothermic
        temperatures.
        Discussion
        In this study, we found a temperature-sensitive RNAi
        effect on several mammalian cells (Figs. 1–3) as in the
        insect [6] and plant [7] systems, suggesting its conservation
        among eukaryotes. The temperature-sensitivity
        of the RNAi effect on the expression of GFP and LacZ
        genes differed (Fig. 2B). In the case of GFP, RNAi by
        two different siRNAs with a different GC content
        (GFP5¼52.6%, siGFP¼71.4%) was similarly and
        markedly affected by the hypothermic-temperature,
        while the RNAi effect on LacZ by siLacZ (GC content
        ¼47.4%) was relatively resistant to the hypothermic-
        temperature, suggesting that the temperature and
        degree of sensitivity differ among target genes (Fig. 2B).
        This would be a reason for the high level expression of
        ectopic gene in mammalian cells at a hypothermic temperature
        (Fig. 1A) and could be experimentally and
        therapeutically useful for the fine control of the effect of
        RNAi on a specific target gene by controlling the temperature
        in vitro and in vivo.
        The biological meaning of the temperature-sensitive
        RNAi in homeothermic mammals is not clear. However,
        it is well known that the thermal environment affects
        development, metabolism, and behavior of poikilotherms,
        including sex determination and hibernation [14].
        The heterochromatin formation and chromatin-based
        gene silencing highly correlate with the suppression of
        internal repetitive transposable elements by RNAi [15–
        17]. Suggestively, the position effect variegation (PEV),
        an epigenetic gene regulation by vicinal heterochromatin
        [18,19], and the activation of internal latent transposons
        [20,21] are temperature-sensitive in the insect, plant, and
        fungi systems. To expect, analogically, that the temperature-
        sensitive RNAi in poikilotherms, or also in hypothermic
        mammals, could epigenetically affect the ectopic
        and internal gene expressions is not so incredible.
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