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Vol 44(2010) N 1 p. 37-44;
P. Zhang1, J.G. Wang1, J.Y. Wan2, W.Q. Liu1*

Screening Efficient siRNAs in vitro AS The Candidate Genes For Chicken Anti-Avian Influenza Virus H5N1 Breeding

1Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, College of Biological Sciences, China Agricultural University, Yuanming Yuan west road No. 2, Beijing, 100193, China
2Institute of Military Veterinary, Academy of Military Medical Sciences, 1068 Qinglong Road, Changchun, 130062, China

*weiquan8@126.com
Received - 2009-03-12; Accepted - 2009-04-10

The frequent disease outbreaks caused by avian influenza virus not only affect the poultry industry but also pose a threat to human safety. To address the problem, RNA interference (RNAi) has recently been widely used as a potential antiviral approach. Transgenesis in combination with RNAi to specifically inhibit avian influenza virus gene expression has been proposed to make chickens resistant to the infection. For the transgenic breeding, screening in vitro efficient siRNAs as the candidate genes is one of the most important tasks. Here, we combined an online search tool and a series of bioinformatics programs with a set of rules for designing siRNAs targeted towards different mRNA regions of H5N1 avian influenza virus. Five rational siRNAs were chosen by this method, five U6 promoter-driven shRNA expression plasmids containing the siRNA genes were constructed and used for producing stably transfected MDCK cells. The data obtained by virus titration, IFA, PI-stained flow cytometry, real-time quantitative RT-PCR, and DAS-ELISA analyses showed that all five stably transfected cell lines were resistant to virus replication when exposed to 100 CCID50 of avian influenza virus H5N1. Finally, most effective plasmids (pSi-604i and pSi-1597i) as the candidates for making the transgenic chickens were chosen. These findings provide baseline information on use of RNAi technique for breeding transgenic chickens resistant to avian influenza virus.

RNA interference, siRNA, avian influenza virus, MDCK cells, transgenic breeding



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