RNA interference blocks gene expression and RNA synthesis from hepatitis C replicons propagated in human liver cells.

Journal: Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America
Published:
Abstract

RNA interference represents an exciting new technology that could have therapeutic applications for the treatment of viral infections. Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major cause of chronic liver disease and affects >270 million individuals worldwide. The HCV genome is a single-stranded RNA that functions as both a messenger RNA and replication template, making it an attractive target for the study of RNA interference. Double-stranded small interfering RNA (siRNA) molecules designed to target the HCV genome were introduced through electroporation into a human hepatoma cell line (Huh-7) that contained an HCV subgenomic replicon. Two siRNAs dramatically reduced virus-specific protein expression and RNA synthesis to levels that were 90% less than those seen in cells treated with negative control siRNAs. These same siRNAs protected naive Huh-7 cells from challenge with HCV replicon RNA. Treatment of cells with synthetic siRNA was effective >72 h, but the duration of RNA interference could be extended beyond 3 weeks through stable expression of complementary strands of the interfering RNA by using a bicistronic expression vector. These results suggest that a gene-therapeutic approach with siRNA could ultimately be used to treat HCV.

Authors
Joyce Wilson, Sumedha Jayasena, Anastasia Khvorova, Sarah Sabatinos, Ian Rodrigue Gervais, Sudha Arya, Farida Sarangi, Marees Harris Brandts, Sylvie Beaulieu, Christopher Richardson
Relevant Conditions

Hepatitis C, Hepatitis