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Featured researches published by Sumedha Jayasena.


Cell | 2003

Functional siRNAs and miRNAs Exhibit Strand Bias

Anastasia Khvorova; Angela Reynolds; Sumedha Jayasena

Abstract Both microRNAs (miRNA) and small interfering RNAs (siRNA) share a common set of cellular proteins (Dicer and the RNA-induced silencing complex [RISC]) to elicit RNA interference. In the following work, a statistical analysis of the internal stability of published miRNA sequences in the context of miRNA precursor hairpins revealed enhanced flexibility of miRNA precursors, especially at the 5′-anti-sense (AS) terminal base pair. The same trend was observed in siRNA, with functional duplexes displaying a lower internal stability (Δ0.5 kcal/mol) at the 5′-AS end than nonfunctional duplexes. Average internal stability of siRNA molecules retrieved from plant cells after introduction of long RNA sequences also shows this characteristic thermodynamic signature. Together, these results suggest that the thermodynamic properties of siRNA play a critical role in determining the molecules function and longevity, possibly biasing the steps involved in duplex unwinding and strand retention by RISC.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

Sequence elements outside the hammerhead ribozyme catalytic core enable intracellular activity

Anastasia Khvorova; Aurélie Lescoute; Eric Westhof; Sumedha Jayasena

The hammerhead ribozyme (HHRz) is a small, naturally occurring ribozyme that site-specifically cleaves RNA and has long been considered a potentially useful tool for gene silencing. The minimal conserved HHRz motif derived from natural sequences consists of three helices that intersect at a highly conserved catalytic core of 11 nucleotides. The presence of this motif is sufficient to support cleavage at high Mg2+ concentrations, but not at the low Mg2+ concentrations characteristic of intracellular environments. Here we demonstrate that natural HHRzs require the presence of additional nonconserved sequence elements outside of the conserved catalytic core to enable intracellular activity. These elements may stabilize the HHRz in a catalytically active conformation via tertiary interactions. HHRzs stabilized by these interactions cleave efficiently at physiological Mg2+ concentrations and are functional in vivo. The proposed role of these tertiary interacting motifs is supported by mutational, functional, structural and molecular modeling analysis of natural HHRzs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

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

Joyce A. Wilson; Sumedha Jayasena; Anastasia Khvorova; Sarah Sabatinos; Ian Gaël Rodrigue-Gervais; Sudha Arya; Farida Sarangi; Marees Harris-Brandts; Sylvie Beaulieu; Christopher D. Richardson

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.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2004

Fast Cleavage Kinetics of a Natural Hammerhead Ribozyme

Marella D. Canny; Fiona M. Jucker; Elizabeth Kellogg; Anastasia Khvorova; Sumedha Jayasena; Arthur Pardi


RNA | 2004

Folding of the natural hammerhead ribozyme is enhanced by interaction of auxiliary elements.

J. Carlos Penedo; Timothy J. Wilson; Sumedha Jayasena; Anastasia Khvorova; David M. J. Lilley


RNA | 2004

Artificial tertiary motifs stabilize trans-cleaving hammerhead ribozymes under conditions of submillimolar divalent ions and high temperatures

Vanvimon Saksmerprome; Manami Roychowdhury-Saha; Sumedha Jayasena; Anastasia Khvorova; Donald H. Burke


Archive | 2004

Short interfering rna as an antiviral agent for hepatitis c

Sumedha Jayasena; Christopher D. Richardson


Archive | 2001

Identification and use of effectors and allosteric molecules for the alteration of gene expression

William Marshall; Anastasia Khvorova; Sumedha Jayasena


Archive | 2008

NUCLEIC ACIDS HYBRIDIZABLE TO MICRO RNA AND PRECURSORS THEREOF

Sumedha Jayasena


Archive | 2008

Increasing erythropoietin using nucleic acids hybridizable to micro-rna and precursors thereof

Sumedha Jayasena; Susan Swift

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Anastasia Khvorova

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Arthur Pardi

University of Colorado Boulder

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Fiona M. Jucker

University of Colorado Boulder

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Marella D. Canny

University of Colorado Boulder

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