izzy Posted March 3, 2011 Posted March 3, 2011 When virus RNA is produced in the cytosol, Dicer (a RNAse III Enzyme) can cut it to short nucleotides (20-25 nt) that are called siRNA (small interfering RNA). This siRNA can be incorporated into the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). RISC can now knockdown mRNA that has the (complementary) sequence of the siRNA. My question: Does RISC knocks down every mRNA? Does it know down the "good" cellular mRNA-transcripts or just the "bad" virus mRNA? I mean, why does RNA interference exists at all?
CharonY Posted March 3, 2011 Posted March 3, 2011 The recognition is based on the sequence. If it fits, it gets diced. RNA looks the same, regardless of origin.
Bobr Posted March 4, 2011 Posted March 4, 2011 RNAi serves basicly for recognition of viral dsRNA. Normally, there´s no dsRNA in cells, and when it appears, it´s a sign that we have a company. So it´s more like antiviral defense, which is now used for experiments with cellular genes.
CharonY Posted March 4, 2011 Posted March 4, 2011 Well, partially true. It is likely that its origins were defense against transposons and viruses. However, it has also been shown to play a role in endogenous gene regulation. It has been shown that sense and antisense RNA is being produced (I think one of the first papers was in Drosophila 2000 or 2001). And it appears that this is also regulated by silencing.
Thewar Posted March 12, 2011 Posted March 12, 2011 RNAi is a more fine-tuned regulation system. It probably evolved as an anti-viral response, but cells later used it for their own regulation (too lazy to pull up the references). For example, it'll be easier to slow down regulation by producing a specific amount of RNAi rather than adjusting ribosomal level or etc. This fine-tuning of translation is the likely reason for the use of RNAi.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now