Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.358, No.3, 727-732, 2007
Parent-of-origin dependent gene-specific knock down in mouse embryos
In mice hemizygous for the Oct4-GFP transgene, the F I embryos show parent-of-origin dependent expression of the marker gene. F I embryos with a maternally derived OG2 allele (OG2(mat)/-) express GFP in the oocyte and during preimplantation development until the blastocyst stage indicating a maternal and embryonic expression pattern. F1-embryos with a paternally inherited OG2 allele (OG2(pat)/-) express GFP from the 4- to 8-cell stage onwards showing only embryonic expression. This allows to study allele specific knock down of GFP expression. RNA interference (RNAi) was highly efficient in embryos with the paternally inherited GFP allele, whereas embryos with the maternally inherited GFP allele showed a delayed and less stringent suppression, indicating that the initial levels of the target transcript and the half life of the protein affect RNAi efficacy. RT-PCR analysis revealed only minimum of GFP mRNA. These results have implications for studies of gene silencing in mammalian embryos. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Oct4-GFP transgene;RNA interference;maternal inheritance;paternal inheritance;short interfering RNA;preimplantation development;gene expression