Sirtuins

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Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
סירטואינים
Name (Latin)
Sirtuins
Name (Arabic)
סירטואינים
Other forms of name
Silent mating type information regulator 2-like proteins
Sir2-like proteins
Sir2 proteins
SIRT proteins
See Also From tracing topical name
Proteins
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q421331
Library of congress: sh2010012830
Sources of Information
  • Work cat.: Kendrick, A.A. Determining the consequences of sirtuin activity on liver metabolism in a mouse model of obesity, 2010:
  • MESH browser, viewed Aug. 6, 2010
  • AccessScience from McGraw Hill, via WWW
  • Wikipedia WWW site, Aug. 13, 2010
Wikipedia description:

Sirtuins are a family of signaling proteins involved in metabolic regulation. They are ancient in animal evolution and appear to possess a highly conserved structure throughout all kingdoms of life. Chemically, sirtuins are a class of proteins that possess either mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase or deacylase activity, including deacetylase, desuccinylase, demalonylase, demyristoylase and depalmitoylase activity. The name Sir2 comes from the yeast gene 'silent mating-type information regulation 2', the gene responsible for cellular regulation in yeast. From in vitro studies, sirtuins were thought to be implicated in influencing cellular processes like aging, transcription, apoptosis, inflammation and stress resistance, as well as energy efficiency and alertness during low-calorie situations. As of 2018, there was no clinical evidence that sirtuins affect human aging, and a 2022 review criticized researchers who propagate this claim. Yeast Sir2 and some, but not all, sirtuins are protein deacetylases. Unlike other known protein deacetylases, which simply hydrolyze acetyl-lysine residues, the sirtuin-mediated deacetylation reaction couples lysine deacetylation to NAD+ hydrolysis. This hydrolysis yields O-acetyl-ADP-ribose, the deacetylated substrate and nicotinamide, which is an inhibitor of sirtuin activity itself. These proteins utilize NAD+ to maintain cellular health and turn NAD+ to nicotinamide (NAM). The dependence of sirtuins on NAD+ links their enzymatic activity directly to the energy status of the cell via the cellular NAD+:NADH ratio, the absolute levels of NAD+, NADH or NAM or a combination of these variables. Sirtuins that deacetylate histones are structurally and mechanistically distinct from other classes of histone deacetylases (classes I, IIA, IIB and IV), which have a different protein fold and use Zn2+ as a cofactor.

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