Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Tide" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 De novo evolution of antibiotic resistance to Oct-TriA1 Chowdhury FR; Mercado LD; Kharitonov K; Findlay BL; 39832423
BIOLOGY
2 In Silico Study of the Early Stages of Aggregation of β-Sheet Forming Antimicrobial Peptide GL13K Hamidabad MN; Watson NA; Wright LN; Mansbach RA; 38572930
PHYSICS
3 Tide-induced infiltration and resuspension of microplastics in shorelines: Insights from tidal tank experiments Feng Q; Chen Z; An C; Yang X; Wang Z; 37084574
ENCS
4 Oligonucleotides Containing C5-Propynyl Modified Arabinonucleic Acids: Synthesis, Biophysical and Antisense Properties Pontarelli A; Wilds CJ; 36857293
CHEMBIOCHEM
5 Preparation of a Convertible Spacer Containing a Disulfide Group for Versatile Functionalization of Oligonucleotides Pontarelli A; Liu JT; Oh JK; Wilds CJ; 36840706
CHEMBIOCHEM
6 Converting antimicrobial into targeting peptides reveals key features governing protein import into mitochondria and chloroplasts Caspari OD; Garrido C; Law CO; Choquet Y; Wollman FA; Lafontaine I; 36733255
BIOLOGY
7 Arabinonucleic Acids Containing C5-Propynyl Modifications Form Stable Hybrid Duplexes with RNA that are Efficiently Degraded by E. coli RNase H Pontarelli A; Wilds CJ; 35452799
CHEMBIOCHEM
8 Transcriptome-Wide Off-Target Effects of Steric-Blocking Oligonucleotides Holgersen EM; Gandhi S; Zhou Y; Kim J; Vaz B; Bogojeski J; Bugno M; Shalev Z; Cheung-Ong K; Gonçalves J; O' Hara M; Kron K; Verby M; Sun M; Kakaradov B; Delong A; Merico D; Deshwar AG; 34388351
ENCS
9 Duplicated antagonistic EPF peptides optimize grass stomatal initiation Jangra R; Brunetti SC; Wang X; Kaushik P; Gulick PJ; Foroud NA; Wang S; Lee JS; 34328169
BIOLOGY
10 Amyloid-β (1-42) peptide induces rapid NMDA receptor-dependent alterations at glutamatergic synapses in the entorhinal cortex Olajide OJ; Chapman CA; 34144329
PSYCHOLOGY
11 Identification of a Novel Biosynthetic Gene Cluster in Aspergillus niger Using Comparative Genomics Evdokias G; Semper C; Mora-Ochomogo M; Di Falco M; Nguyen TTM; Savchenko A; Tsang A; Benoit-Gelber I; 34064722
BIOLOGY
12 Beyond ribose and phosphate: Selected nucleic acid modifications for structure-function investigations and therapeutic applications Liczner C; Duke K; Juneau G; Egli M; Wilds CJ; 33981365
CHEMBIOCHEM
13 Recent Advances of DNA Tetrahedra for Therapeutic Delivery and Biosensing. Copp W, Pontarelli A, Wilds CJ 33506614
CHEMBIOCHEM
14 Hydrated electrons induce the formation of interstrand cross-links in DNA modified by cisplatin adducts Behmand B; Noronha AM; Wilds CJ; Marignier JL; Mostafavi M; Wagner JR; Hunting DJ; Sanche L; 32211848
CHEMBIOCHEM
15 Nucleotide Excision Repair Protein Rad23 Regulates Cell Virulence Independent of Rad4 in Candida albicans. Feng J, Yao S, Dong Y, Hu J, Whiteway M, Feng J 32075883
BIOLOGY
16 Cyst Reduction in a Polycystic Kidney Disease Drosophila Model Using Smac Mimics. Millet-Boureima C, Chingle R, Lubell WD, Gamberi C 31635379
BIOLOGY
17 Genotype scores predict drug efficacy in subtypes of female sexual interest/arousal disorder: A double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled cross-over trial. Tuiten A, Michiels F, Böcker KB, Höhle D, van Honk J, de Lange RP, van Rooij K, Kessels R, Bloemers J, Gerritsen J, Janssen P, de Leede L, Meyer JJ, Everaerd W, Frijlink HW, Koppeschaar HP, Olivier B, Pfaus JG 30016917
CSBN
18 O(6)-Alkylguanine DNA Alkyltransferase Repair Activity Towards Intrastrand Cross-Linked DNA is Influenced by the Internucleotide Linkage. O'Flaherty DK, Wilds CJ 26692563
CHEMISTRY
19 TRAPPopathies: An emerging set of disorders linked to variations in the genes encoding transport protein particle (TRAPP)-associated proteins. Sacher M, Shahrzad N, Kamel H, Milev MP 30152084
BIOLOGY
20 Characterization of two novel antimicrobial peptides from the cuticular extracts of the ant Trichomyrmex criniceps (Mayr), (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Bhagavathula N, Meedidoddi V, Bourque S, Vimaladevi R, Kesavakurup S, Selvadurai D, Shrivastava S, Krishnappa C 28346717
PERFORM

 

Title:Transcriptome-Wide Off-Target Effects of Steric-Blocking Oligonucleotides
Authors:Holgersen EMGandhi SZhou YKim JVaz BBogojeski JBugno MShalev ZCheung-Ong KGonçalves JO' Hara MKron KVerby MSun MKakaradov BDelong AMerico DDeshwar AG
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34388351/
DOI:10.1089/nat.2020.0921
Publication:Nucleic acid therapeutics
Keywords:off-target effectssplice-switchingsteric-blocking oligonucleotides
PMID:34388351 Category: Date Added:2021-08-14
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Deep Genomics, Inc., Toronto, Canada.
2 Graduate School of Medical Science and Engineering, KAIST, Daejeon, Republic of Korea.
3 Providence Therapeutics, Toronto, Canada.
4 The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Canada.
5 Skyhawk Therapeutics, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA.
6 Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.

Description:

Steric-blocking oligonucleotides (SBOs) are short, single-stranded nucleic acids designed to modulate gene expression by binding to RNA transcripts and blocking access from cellular machinery such as splicing factors. SBOs have the potential to bind to near-complementary sites in the transcriptome, causing off-target effects. In this study, we used RNA-seq to evaluate the off-target differential splicing events of 81 SBOs and differential expression events of 46 SBOs. Our results suggest that differential splicing events are predominantly hybridization driven, whereas differential expression events are more common and driven by other mechanisms (including spurious experimental variation). We further evaluated the performance of in silico screens for off-target splicing events, and found an edit distance cutoff of three to result in a sensitivity of 14% and false discovery rate (FDR) of 99%. A machine learning model incorporating splicing predictions substantially improved the ability to prioritize low edit distance hits, increasing sensitivity from 4% to 26% at a fixed FDR of 90%. Despite these large improvements in performance, this approach does not detect the majority of events at an FDR <99%. Our results suggest that in silico methods are currently of limited use for predicting the off-target effects of SBOs, and experimental screening by RNA-seq should be the preferred approach.





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