| Literature DB >> 26136662 |
Xi Lu1, Li Wang2, Caijia Yu3, Daohai Yu4, Gang Yu1.
Abstract
It is becoming more evident that histone acetylation, as one of the epigenetic modifications or markers, plays a key role in the etiology of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Histone acetylases and histone deacetylases (HDACs) are the well-known covalent enzymes that modify the reversible acetylation of lysine residues in histone amino-terminal domains. In AD, however, the roles of these enzymes are controversial. Some recent studies indicate that HDAC inhibitors are neuroprotective by regulating memory and synaptic dysfunctions in cellular and animal models of AD; while on the other hand, increase of histone acetylation have been implicated in AD pathology. In this review, we focus on the recent advances on the roles of histone acetylation covalent enzymes in AD and discuss how targeting these enzymes can ultimately lead to therapeutic approaches for treating AD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; histone acetylase; histone acetylation; histone deacetylase; histone deacetylase inhibitor
Year: 2015 PMID: 26136662 PMCID: PMC4468862 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2015.00226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1Histone acetylases (HATs) reversibly transfer the acetyl groups to the core histones by neutralizing the positive charge of the lysine (K) residues in histone N-terminals, resulting in an open chromatin structure accessible to transcriptional factors and an activation of gene transcription, while histone deacetylation usually leads to gene transcriptional repression.
HDAC family and HDAC inhibitors.
| HDAC subclass | Localization | Selective-inhibitor | Non-selective-inhibitor | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class I zinc-dependent | HDAC1 | Nucleus | MS-275, FK-228 | TSA, VPA |
| HDAC2 | Nucleus | FK-228, Apician | Butyrate, SAHA | |
| HDAC3 | Nucleus, cytoplasm | Apician, RGFP136 | MGCD0103 | |
| HDAC8 | Nucleus, cytoplasm | |||
| Class Iia zinc-dependent | HDAC4 | Nucleus, cytoplasm | TSA, phenyl butyrate | |
| HDAC5 | Nucleus, cytoplasm | |||
| HDAC7 | Nucleus, cytoplasm | |||
| HDAC9 | Nucleus, cytoplasm | |||
| Class Iib zinc-dependent | HDAC6 | Cytoplasm | Tubacin | TSA, SAHA |
| HDAC10 | Nucleus, cytoplasm | |||
| Class III NAD+-dependent | SirT1 | Nucleus | Suramin | Nicotinamide |
| SirT2 | Nucleus, cytoplasm | Suramin, AGK2 | ||
| SirT3 | Mitochondria | |||
| SirT4 | Mitochondria | |||
| SirT5 | Mitochondria | |||
| SirT6 | Nucleus | |||
| SirT7 | Nucleus | |||
| Class IV zinc-dependent | HDAC11 | Nucleus | ||
HAT family.
| HAT subclass (type A) | Histone substrate | |
|---|---|---|
| GNAT family | Gnc5, PCAF, ELP3 | H3K9, 14, 18, 36 |
| MYST family | Tip60, MOZ, MORF, HBO1, HMOF | H4K5, 8, 12, 16, H3K14 |
| p300/CBP family | p300, CBP | H2AK5, H2BK12,15, H3K14, 18, H4K5, 8 |
| Transcription factor related | TFIIIC, TAF1 | H3K9, 14, 18 |
| Nuclear receptor co-activators | SRC, ACTR, P160, CLOCK | H3/4 |