| Literature DB >> 26818131 |
Showkat Ahmad Dar1, Anamika Thakur1, Abid Qureshi1, Manoj Kumar1.
Abstract
Small interfering RNA (siRNA) technology has vast potential for functional genomics and development of therapeutics. However, it faces many obstacles predominantly instability of siRNAs due to nuclease digestion and subsequently biologically short half-life. Chemical modifications in siRNAs provide means to overcome these shortcomings and improve their stability and potency. Despite enormous utility bioinformatics resource of these chemically modified siRNAs (cm-siRNAs) is lacking. Therefore, we have developed siRNAmod, a specialized databank for chemically modified siRNAs. Currently, our repository contains a total of 4894 chemically modified-siRNA sequences, comprising 128 unique chemical modifications on different positions with various permutations and combinations. It incorporates important information on siRNA sequence, chemical modification, their number and respective position, structure, simplified molecular input line entry system canonical (SMILES), efficacy of modified siRNA, target gene, cell line, experimental methods, reference etc. It is developed and hosted using Linux Apache MySQL PHP (LAMP) software bundle. Standard user-friendly browse, search facility and analysis tools are also integrated. It would assist in understanding the effect of chemical modifications and further development of stable and efficacious siRNAs for research as well as therapeutics. siRNAmod is freely available at: http://crdd.osdd.net/servers/sirnamod.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26818131 PMCID: PMC4730238 DOI: 10.1038/srep20031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Cartoon representation of RNAi mechanism, siRNA molecular structure and its entry in RNAi pathway.
Figure 2Chemical modification statistics pie charts (a) Overall siRNA modifications, (b) nucleotide component based (sugar, base phosphate), (c) Antisense strand modification distribution and (d) Sense strand modification distribution.
Figure 3Reverse complement based chemical modification of siRNA position wise on sense and antisense siRNA sequences.
Figure 4Display of search output with cm-siRNA details (a) Result output of search or browse (b) Details page of individual entry (c) Structure and other chemical information of modification.
Figure 5Diagrammatic representation of siRNAmod architecture.