Small molecule ligand–RNA interactions have the potential
to influence gene expression at a variety of steps and in a
number of ways. Here, we demonstrate that such interactions
are sufficiently stable to inhibit translation of eukaryotic
mRNAs in vitro and in vivo. Inhibition is only observed when
the 5′ UTR of the mRNA is targeted, and the response is
proportional to the number of binding sites within this region.
We find that small molecule ligand–RNA interactions can
be sufficiently stable to prevent 80S ribosome assembly on an
mRNA template. The ability to specifically ablate expression
of a defined mRNA with a small molecule ligand demonstrates
proof of principle for pharmacological targeting aimed at
controlling translation of specific mRNAs.