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language
eng
Attribute
Original article
Author
NAKAMURA, Takeshi
Description
Sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) is an evolutionarily conserved NAD+-dependent protein deacetylase. Given that the absolute cellular concentrations of NAD+ are much higher than the reported SIRT1 Km value for NAD+ (~90 μM), we hypothesized that changes in cellular NAD+ may not be a significant regulator of SIRT1 activity. To test this hypothesis, we examined the effects of boosting or inhibiting NAD+ synthesis on the acetylation of histone H4 lysine 16 and H3 lysine 9, reported targets of SIRT1. Altering cellular NAD+ concentrations from 100 to 1400 μM did not affect acetylation, whereas treatment with a class I/II histone deacetylase inhibitor elevated acetylation dramatically. Unexpectedly, neither SIRT1 inhibition nor SIRT1 knockdown increased histone acetylation. We conclude that SIRT1 may not be the primary deacetylase of the acetylated histone residues and that global acetylation levels may not always represent cellular SIRT1 activity.
Subject
NAD+
SIRT1
histone
acetylation
Journal Title
Shimane Journal of Medical Science
Volume
38
Issue
2
Start Page
59
End Page
66
ISSN
03865959
ISSN(Online)
24332410
Published Date
2021-06
NCID
AA00841586
Publisher
Faculty of Medicine, Shimane University
Publisher Aalternative
島根大学医学部
NII Type
Departmental Bulletin Paper
Format
PDF
Rights
Faculty of Medicine, Shimane University
Text Version
出版社版
OAI-PMH Set
Faculty of Medicine
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