pubmed:abstractText |
RNase H-competent phosphorothioates (S-DNAs) have dominated the antisense field in large part because they offer reasonable resistance to nucleases, they afford good efficacy in cell-free test systems, they can be targeted against sites throughout the RNA transcript of a gene, and they are widely available from commercial sources at modest prices. However, these merits are counterbalanced by significant limitations, including: degradation by nucleases, poor in-cell targeting predictability, low sequence specificity, and a variety of non-antisense activities. In cell-free and cultured-cell systems where one wishes to block the translation of a messenger RNA coding for a normal protein, RNase H-independent morpholino antisense oligos provide complete resistance to nucleases, generally good targeting predictability, generally high in-cell efficacy, excellent sequence specificity, and very preliminary results suggest they may exhibit little non-antisense activity.
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