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RNAi From Mechanism to Medicine |
Craig C Mello, PhD |
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Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
The Blais University Chair in Molecular Medicine
University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester, Massachusetts |
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While investigating the genetic workings of the microscopic
worm, C. elegans, Mello and colleague Andrew
Fire, PhD, of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, discovered
RNAi, a natural but previously unrecognized
process by which a certain form of RNA can be manipulated
to silence—or interfere with—the expression of a
selected gene. The discovery, published in the journal
Nature in 1998, has had two extraordinary impacts on
biological science. One is as a research tool: RNAi is
now the state-of-the-art method by which scientists can
knock out the expression of specific genes in cells, to
thus define the biological functions of those genes. But
just as important has been the finding that RNA interference
is a normal process of genetic regulation that takes
place during development. Thus, RNAi has provided not
only a powerful research tool for experimentally knocking
out the expression of specific genes, but has opened
a completely new and totally unanticipated window on
developmental gene regulation. RNAi is now showing
promising in the clinic as a new class of gene-specific
therapeutics.
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