| Literature DB >> 23497088 |
Susan Costantini1, Ankush Sharma, Raffaele Raucci, Maria Costantini, Ida Autiero, Giovanni Colonna.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sirtuins genes are widely distributed by evolution and have been found in eubacteria, archaea and eukaryotes. While prokaryotic and archeal species usually have one or two sirtuin homologs, in humans as well as in eukaryotes we found multiple versions and in mammals this family is comprised of seven different homologous proteins being all NAD-dependent de-acylases. 3D structures of human SIRT2, SIRT3, and SIRT5 revealed the overall conformation of the conserved core domain but they were unable to give a structural information about the presence of very flexible and dynamically disordered regions, the role of which is still structurally and functionally unclear. Recently, we modeled the 3D-structure of human SIRT1, the most studied member of this family, that unexpectedly emerged as a member of the intrinsically disordered proteins with its long disordered terminal arms. Despite clear similarities in catalytic cores between the human sirtuins little is known of the general structural characteristics of these proteins. The presence of disorder in human SIRT1 and the propensity of these proteins in promoting molecular interactions make it important to understand the underlying mechanisms of molecular recognition that reasonably should involve terminal segments. The mechanism of recognition, in turn, is a prerequisite for the understanding of any functional activity. Aim of this work is to understand what structural properties are shared among members of this family in humans as well as in other organisms.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23497088 PMCID: PMC3599600 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-13-60
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
List of analyzed Sirtuins
| Chlamydomonas reinhardtii | Plant | | | | | | | |
| Ostreococcus lucimarinus | Plant | | x | | | | | |
| Micromonas pusilla | Plant | | x | | | | | |
| Ostreococcus Tauri | Plant | | x | | | | | |
| Arabidopsis thaliana | Plant | | | | x | | x | |
| Triticum aestivum | Plant | | | | | | x | |
| Zea Mays | Plant | | | | | | x | |
| Oriza sativa | Plant | | | | x | x | x | |
| vitis vinifera | Plant | | | | | | x | |
| Ricinus communis | Plant | | | | | | x | |
| Physcomitrella patens | Plant | | | | x | x | x | x |
| Ajellomyces dermatitidis | Fungi | x | x | | | | | |
| Trichoplax adhaerens | Fungi | | x | | | | | |
| Hydra magnipapillata | Cnidaria | x | | | | | | |
| Nematostella Vectensis | Cnidaria | | x | | | | | |
| Branchiostoma floridae | Cephalochordata | | x | | | | | |
| Ciona intestinalis | Ascidiacea | | x | x | | x | | x |
| Strongylocentrotus | Echinodermata | x | | | x | | x | |
| Perkinsus Marinus | Dinoflagellata | | | | | x | | |
| Brugia malayi | Secernentea | x | x | | | | | |
| Schistosoma Mansoni | Trematoda | x | x | | | | | |
| Caligus Roger Cressey | Crustaceans | | x | | | | | |
| Lepeophtheirus Salmonis | Crustaceans | | x | | | | x | |
| Acyrthosiphon Pisum | Insecta | | | | x | | | |
| Tribolium Castaneum | Insecta | x | | | | | | |
| Apis Mellifera | Insecta | x | x | | x | x | x | x |
| Bombyx mori | Insecta | | x | | | | | |
| Drosophila melanogaster | Insecta | | x | | x | | x | |
| Nasonia vetripennis | Insecta | | | | | x | | |
| Pediculus humanus corporis | Insecta | x | x | | | | | |
| Tribolium castaneum | Insecta | | x | | x | | | |
| Anoplopoma Fimbria | Fish | | | | | x | | |
| Danio Rerio | Fish | | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| Salmo Salar | Fish | | x | | | x | | |
| Nothobranchius Kuhntae | Fish | x | | | | | | |
| Xenopus laevis | Amphibia | x | x | x | x | | x | x |
| Taeniopygia Guttata | Aves | x | | x | x | x | | |
| Gallus gallus | Aves | x | x | x | x | | x | |
| Equus Caballus | Mammalia | x | x | x | x | | | x |
| Macaca Mulatta | Mammalia | x | | x | x | x | x | x |
| Monodelphis Domestica | Mammalia | x | | | | | | |
| Oryctolagus Cuniculus | Mammalia | | | x | | | | |
| Pan Troglodytes | Mammalia | | | | x | x | x | x |
| Ovis Aries | Mammalia | | | | x | | | |
| Ornithorhynchus Anatinus | Mammalia | x | | | | x | | |
| Canis Familiaris | Mammailia | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| Bos Taurus | Mammalia | x | x | | x | x | x | x |
| Sus Scrofa | Mammalia | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| Mus Musculus | Mammalia | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| Rattus Norvegicus | Mammalia | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
| Human | Mammalia | x | x | x | x | x | x | x |
Figure 1Mean length of the three regions in the family of sirtuins. Bars for N-terminal, catalytic core and C-terminal regions are reported in Red, Green and blue, respectively.
Figure 2Analysis of charged residue presence. We report the average percentages of charged residues in sirtuin families. Bars for N-terminal, catalytic core and C-terminal regions are reported in Red, Green and blue, respectively.
Figure 3Results of disordered predictions. We report the percentage of predicted disordered regions in sirtuins. Bars for N-terminal, catalytic core and C-terminal regions are reported in Red, Green and blue, respectively.
Nuclear export and localization signals in Sirtuin family
| | | | | | | | |
NES or NLS indicates the presence of the signal in a specific group of Sirtuins. No NLS signal has been found in the C-terminal segments.
Linear regression equations calculated plotting the value of GC content in each protein family, i.e., SIRTs, myoglobins and alpha-crystallins (a and b chains) on the y axis and the various organisms in phylogenetic order on X axis
| y = 0.898x + 36.77 | y = 0.310x + 37.89 | y = 1.915x + 34.01 | y = 0.520x + 37.62 | |
| y = 0.832x + 38.50 | y = 0.888x + 37.60 | y = 0.957x + 38.64 | y = 1.336x + 30.96 | |
| y = 0.529x + 54.32 | y = 0.879x + 49.96 | y = 1.316x + 49.76 | y = 1.278x + 43.10 | |
| y = 0.933x + 43.09 | y = 1.016x + 42.07 | y = 0.402x + 48.88 | y = 0.389x - 0.317 | |
| y = 0.926x + 44.12 | y = 0.947x + 44.11 | y = 0.830x + 44.55 | y = −0.435x + 6.341 | |
| y = 2.221x + 36.85 | y = 1.766x + 40.43 | y = 1.912x + 44.92 | y = 3.389x + 30.43 | |
| y = 3.841x + 30.92 | y = 2.053x + 42.16 | y = 2.939x + 45.57 | y = 2.177x + 42.60 | |
| y = 0,247x + 47,89 | | | | |
| | | | | |
| y = 1.223x + 47.12 | | | | |
| y = 0.290x + 52.71 |
Figure 4GC content trends. We report the trends in the sirtuin family from evolutionary lower organisms to higher and their slopes (black) according to their N-terminal, C-terminal and Core basis content. We have numbered the various organisms according to the sequence shown in Table 1. The colors used for each sirtuin family are reported in the legend.
Figure 5Chromosomal Data. We report low (400-band; ideogram A) and high (850-band; ideogram B-C) resolution bands of human chromosome 10, 19, 11, 12, 6 and 11. The correspondence between low- and high resolution bands is unequivocally established in the literature (see Materials and methods). Panel b is the ideogram of Francke (1994). In the high-resolution bands of c, dark blue and light blue bands correspond to L1+ and L1− G bands, red and yellow bands to H3+ and H3− R bands, respectively. With rectangle in blu or in red are identified the chromosomal bands in which the sirtuin genes are localized. In the central blue rectangle the GC% of sirtuin genes are reported.
Figure 6Phylogenetic analysis. We report the trees obtained for full-length sirtuin sequences (A), N-terminal (B) and C- terminal (C) regions with bootstrap values evaluated by SplitsTree 4.
Sirtuin classes with reference to all the entire sequences (A), N-terminal (B) and C-terminal (C) regions
| | | ||||
| SIRT1 | x | | | | |
| SIRT2 | x | | | | |
| SIRT3 | x | | | | |
| SIRT4 | | x | | | |
| SIRT5 | | | x | | |
| SIRT6 | | | | x | |
| SIRT7 | | | | x | |
| | |||||
| SIRT1 | x | | | | |
| SIRT2 | | x | | | |
| SIRT3 | | | x | | |
| SIRT4 | | | | | x |
| SIRT5 | | | | | x |
| SIRT6 | | | | x | |
| SIRT7 | | | | x | |
| | | | | ||
| SIRT1 | x | | | | |
| SIRT2 | | x | | | |
| SIRT3 | | x | | | |
| SIRT6 | x | | | | |
| SIRT7 | x | ||||
Phosphorylation sites predictions for human sirtuins
| | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13(27%) | 5(10%) | 30(63%) | 20(25%) | 10(13%) | 50(62%) | 8(38%) | 1(5%) | 12(57%) | |
| 5(22%) | 11(48%) | 7(30%) | 8(18%) | 28(62%) | 9(20%) | 3(33%) | 2(22%) | 4(45%) | |
| 8(50%) | 7(44%) | 1(6%) | 11(35%) | 17(55%) | 3(10%) | 0(0%) | 2(100%) | 0(0%) | |
| 1(11%) | 8(89%) | 0(0%) | 5(18%) | 23(82%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 2(100%) | 0(0%) | |
| 4(29%) | 10(71%) | 0(0%) | 5(19%) | 21(78%) | 1(03%) | 0(0%) | 4(100%) | 0(0%) | |
| 2(11%) | 11(58%) | 6(31%) | 4(11%) | 25(66%) | 9(23%) | 1(13%) | 1(13%) | 6(74%) | |
| 5(19%) | 16(62%) | 5(19%) | 6(13%) | 31(65%) | 11(22%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | 0(0%) | |
We report the prediction obtained by Netphos and GPS. Phosphosite was used as additional reference, though it contains few data about sirtuins. GPS is specific for human sirtuins. In the rows are indicated the total number of phosphosites for segment and in parenthesis the percentage on the total number of phosphosites in the given protein.
Human kinases which are predicted to phosphorylate specific residues in human sirtuins
| 121-Y | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 218-T 280-T | 150-T | 36-S | 87-T 178-S | 345-T | |||||
| 280-T 365-T | | | | | |||||
| 98-S 279-S | | | | 345-T 377-S | |||||
| 218-T | | | | | |||||
| 280-T | 329-S | | | | | ||||
| 166-T | | | | 94-T | 148-T 400-T | ||||
| 53-S 249-S | 117-S | | | | |||||
| 642-Y 699-Y | | | | | | ||||
| 699-Y 742-Y | | | | | | | |||
| 121-Y 658-Y 699-Y 742-Y | 165-Y | | | | | ||||
| 218-T 280-T | | 36-S 176-T | | 345-T | |||||
| | 36-S | | | ||||||
| 280-T | | | | | |||||
| | | | | ||||||
| 98-S 280-T | | | | | | ||||
| 280-T | 150-T | | | | | ||||
| | | | | | | ||||
| | | | | | | ||||
| | | | | | 152-T 167-T | | |||
| | | | 400-T | ||||||
| | 383-T | 337-S | | | 229-T | | |||
| 121-Y 699-Y |
[In red the kinases acting on N-terminal residues, in green on cores and in light blue on C-terminal. Phosphosites predicted but already experimentally determined are indicated underlined and in bold. In the table known functions and cellular locations exerted by these kinases are also reported [Shchemelinin et al., 2006].