| Literature DB >> 28808418 |
Ren-Bo Ding1, Jiaolin Bao1, Chu-Xia Deng1.
Abstract
Fatty liver diseases, which are commonly associated with high-fat/calorie diet, heavy alcohol consumption and/or other metabolic disorder causes, lead to serious medical concerns worldwide in recent years. It has been demonstrated that metabolic homeostasis disruption is most likely to be responsible for this global epidemic. Sirtuins are a group of conserved nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) dependent histone and/or protein deacetylases belonging to the silent information regulator 2 (Sir2) family. Among seven mammalian sirtuins, sirtuin 1 (SIRT 1) is the most extensively studied one and is involved in both alcoholic and nonalcoholic fatty liver diseases. SIRT1 plays beneficial roles in regulating hepatic lipid metabolism, controlling hepatic oxidative stress and mediating hepatic inflammation through deacetylating some transcriptional regulators against the progression of fatty liver diseases. Here we summarize the latest advances of the biological roles of SIRT1 in regulating lipid metabolism, oxidative stress and inflammation in the liver, and discuss the potential of SIRT1 as a therapeutic target for treating alcoholic and nonalcoholic fatty liver diseases.Entities:
Keywords: fatty acid β-oxidation; fatty liver diseases; inflammation.; lipogenesis; oxidative stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28808418 PMCID: PMC5555103 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.19370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 6.580
Figure 1Fatty liver diseases are initiated by aberrant hepatic lipid metabolism, and sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) activation plays beneficial effect against the process through inhibiting de novo lipogenesis and increasing fatty acid β-oxidation. Liver steatosis is the initial stage of fatty liver diseases, which is characterized by excessive triglyceride (TG) deposition as lipid droplets in the liver. Lipid metabolism is tightly linked with dietary fat, calorie and alcohol intake, which could be subsequently digested and convert to circulating TG-rich chylomicrons, free fatty acid (FFA), glucose, insulin and so on. Circulating TG-rich chylomicrons and free fatty acid (FFA) could be uptaken by liver through transmembrane proteins. High levels of circulating glucose and insulin could stimulate de novo lipogenesis activating transcription factors carbohydrate response element binding protein (ChREBP) and sterol regulatory element binding protein-1c (SREBP-1c), followed by activating their downstream lipogenic enzymes including fatty acid synthase (FAS), acetyl-CoA carboxylase 1 (ACC1), stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1 (SCD1) and elongase of long chain fatty acids family 6 (ELOVL6) to synthesize FFA and TG in the liver. In order to maintain lipid homeostasis, there are also two removal pathways for acquired FFA and TG, including metabolizing FFA through fatty acid β-oxidation in mitochondria via peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα) / peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma co-activator 1 alpha (PGC-1α) signaling, and secreting TG into blood circulation as the form of very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL). Under high-fat diet, high-calorie diet and/or heavy alcohol intake condition, excessive lipid acquisition usually is stimulated through increasing lipid uptake and/or lipogenesis, meanwhile lipid removal pathway could also be impaired by decreasing fatty acid β-oxidation and/or VLDL secretion. Together, the imbalance of hepatic TG/fatty acids flux acquisition and removal consequently cause steatosis in the liver. During the process, SIRT1 activation shows beneficial effect through inhibiting lipogenesis by deacetylating SREBP-1c and ChREBP to block their downstream lipogenic genes, and increasing fatty acid β-oxidation via deacetylating PPARα/PGC-1α, thus rebalances the hepatic lipid hemostasis.
Figure 2Accumulated hepatic oxidative stress and inflammation promote fatty liver diseases progression, and SIRT1 activation plays beneficial effect against diseases progression. Accumulated lipid droplets in the liver will trigger further hepatic oxidative and inflammation, which subsequently develop a continued liver damage process. The excessive hepatic oxidative stress and inflammation are characterized by abundant reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and large cytokine production, particularly tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) and interleukin 6 (IL-6). Additionally, adipose tissue also contributes to the diseases aggravation by secreting FFA and inflammatory cytokines to circulation, which further could be delivered to liver. During fatty liver diseases progression, SIRT1 activation plays beneficial roles on defending hepatic oxidative stress through enhancing antioxidant capability involving fork head box proteins (FOXOs) and PGC-1α deacetylation, and reducing pro-inflammatory cytokines production through deacetylating nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) both in the liver and in the adipose tissue. In addition to beneficial effect, SIRT1 activation also possesses a contradictory role in adipose tissue-liver axis, which might exacerbate fatty liver formation. Under SIRT1 activation, transcriptional activity of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ) is repressed and FOXO1/ adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) signaling is activated, which promote lipolysis of adipose tissue to increase large amount of FFA fluxing to circulation, later might be uptaken by liver.
Figure 3SIRT1 liver-specific knockout causes liver steatosis. (A) Summary of fatty liver cases at different age among control (Sirt1flox5-6) and liver-specific SIRT1 knockout (Sirt1LKO) male mice. (B) Oil Red O staining of 14 months old male liver with higher magnification. (C-E) Liver TG content (C), plasma FFA amount (D) and plasma TG content (E) of 9 months old male mice (n=11). *p<0.05. (Adapted from Wang et al. 2010 68)
Lessons from genetic mouse models on SIRT1 related to fatty liver diseases
| Modification of SIRT1 | Diet | Main metabolic phenotypes related to fatty liver diseases | Targets for SIRT1 | Involved mechanisms | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SIRT1 heterozygous mice (exon 4) | Mediate-fat diet; High-fat diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more hepatic lipid accumulation and inflammatory cytokines production than control mice | SREBP-1c | ↑Lipogenesis; ↑Inflammation | [27] |
| 2 | Liver-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 5-6) | Standard diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more hepatic lipid accumulation than control mice | ChREBP | ↑Lipogenesis | [68] |
| 3 | Liver-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 5-6) | Standard diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more ROS production, hyperglycemia and insulin resistance than control mice | Rictor | ↑Oxidative stress | [69] |
| 4 | Liver-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 4) | High-fat diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more hepatic lipid accumulation and inflammatory cytokines production than control mice | PPARα/PGC-1α | ↓FA β-oxidation | [28] |
| 5 | Liver-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 4) | Alcoholic diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more liver injury and liver fibrosis than control mice | PDGFR-α | ↑Inflammation | [59] |
| 6 | Liver-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 4) | Alcoholic diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more hepatic lipid accumulation and inflammatory cytokines production than control mice | Lipin-1 | ↑Inflammation | [29] |
| 7 | Liver-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 4) | Prolonged fasting | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more hepatic lipid accumulation than control mice | PPARα/FGF21 | ↓FA β-oxidation | [134] |
| 8 | Liver-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 4) | High-fat diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show less hepatic lipid accumulation than control mice (inconsistent with other studies) | SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis | [67] |
| 9 | Liver-specific SIRT1 knockdown mice | Standard diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more hepatic lipid accumulation and hyperglycemia than control mice | PGC-1α; SREBP-1c | ↑Lipogenesis | [92] |
| 10 | Fat-specific SIRT1 knockout mice | High-fat diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more adipose macrophage infiltration and inflammatory cytokines production than control mice | NF-κB | ↑Inflammation | [117] |
| 11 | Fat-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 4) | High-fat diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show increased or reduced inflammation in adipose tissue on short-term or chronic high-fat diet respectively compared to control mice | PPARγ | ↑Inflammation or ↓Inflammation | [156] |
| 12 | Myeloid-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 4) | High-fat diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more inflammatory cytokines production than control mice | NF-κB | ↑Inflammation | [115] |
| 13 | Myeloid-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 4) | High-fat diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more hepatic lipid accumulation, peroxides production and macrophage infiltration than control mice | NF-κB | ↑Inflammation | [114] |
| 14 | Myeloid-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 4) | High-fat diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more hepatic macrophage infiltration and inflammatory cytokines production than control mice than control mice | NF-κB | ↑Inflammation | [157] |
| 15 | Myeloid-specific SIRT1 knockout mice (exon 4) | High-fat diet | SIRT1 deficiency mice show more hepatic lipid accumulation and inflammatory cytokines production than control mice | NF-κB; SREBP-1c | ↑Inflammation; ↑Lipogenesis | [158] |
| 16 | Fat-specific SIRT1 overexpressing mice | Standard diet | SIRT1 overexpressing mice show increased adipose tissue lipolysis compared to control mice | ACC1 | ↑Lipolysis | [147] |
| 17 | SIRT1 overexpressing mice | Alcoholic diet | SIRT1 overexpressing mice show less liver injury and liver fibrosis than control mice | PDGFR- α | ↓Inflammation | [59] |
| 18 | SIRT1 overexpressing mice | High-fat diet | SIRT1 overexpressing mice show less hepatic lipid accumulation and inflammatory cytokines production than control mice | SREBP-1c; MnSOD; NF-κB | ↓Oxidative stress ↓Inflammation | [30] |
| 19 | SIRT1 overexpressing mice | High-fat diet | SIRT1 overexpressing mice show less adipose macrophage infiltration than control mice | NF-κB | ↓Inflammation | [117] |
Summary of pharmacological studies about identified SIRT1 activators and other potential chemical agents in animal models of fatty liver diseases
| Chemical agents | Models | Possible targets | Involved mechanisms | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | SIRT1-PPAR-γ/PPAR-α | ↓Lipogenesis; ↑FA β-oxidation | [33] |
| 2 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis | [120] |
| 3 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/PGC-1α/SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis; ↑FA β-oxidation | [79] |
| 4 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | SIRT1-SREBP-1c/NF-κB | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Inflammation | [78] |
| 5 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/ NF-κB | ↓Inflammation | [116] |
| 6 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | - | ↓Oxidative stress | [107] |
| 7 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | - | ↓Inflammation | [87] |
| 8 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | SIRT1- PPARα-FGF21 | ↑FA β-oxidation | [134] |
| 9 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | SIRT1-LXRα | ↓Lipogenesis | [121] |
| 10 | Resveratrol | AFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/PGC-1α/SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis; ↑FA β-oxidation | [82] |
| 11 | Resveratrol | AFLD | SIRT1-AMPK | ↓Lipogenesis | [159] |
| 12 | SRT1720 | NAFLD | SIRT1-PGC-1α/SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Inflammation | [133] |
| 13 | SRT1720 | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/PGC-1α/PPARα/FOXO1 | ↑FA β-oxidation; ↓Oxidative stress | [93] |
| 14 | SRT1720 | NAFLD | SIRT1- PPARα-FGF21 | ↑FA β-oxidation | [134] |
| 15 | α -Lipoic acid | NAFLD | SIRT1-LKB1/AMPK/SREBP-1c/FOXO1/Nrf2 | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Oxidative Stress | [160] |
| 16 | α-Lipoic acid | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/LKB1 | ↓Lipogenesis; ↑FA β-oxidation | [161] |
| 17 | α‑Mangostin | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/ PPAR-γ | - | [122] |
| 18 | Apo-10'-Lycopenoic Acid | NAFLD | SIRT1-FOXO1 | - | [162] |
| 19 | Cardiotrophin-1 | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/LKB1/SREBP-1c/PGC-1α | ↓Lipogenesis; ↑FA β-oxidation | [163] |
| 20 | Carnosic acid | NAFLD | SIRT1-p66shc | ↓Oxidative stress | [123] |
| 21 | Carvacrol | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Inflammation | [124] |
| 22 | Cobalt protoporphyrin | NAFLD | HO-1- SIRT1-SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Oxidative stress; ↓Inflammation | [164] |
| 23 | Cobalt protoporphyrin | NAFLD | HO-1- SIRT1-PPARα/AMPK | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Oxidative stress; ↓Inflammation | [165] |
| 24 | Epigallocatechin-3-gallate | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/LKB-SREBP-1c/ChREBP | ↓Lipogenesis; | [125] |
| 25 | Exendin-4 | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/LKB1/SREBP-1c/FOXO1 | ↓Lipogenesis; ↑FA β-oxidation | [166] |
| 26 | Exendin-4 | NAFLD | SIRT1-FGF21 | ↑FA β-oxidation | [167] |
| 27 | Indole-3-carbinol | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓ Inflammation | [168] |
| 28 | Leucine | NAFLD | SIRT1-PGC-1α/FOXO1 | ↑FA β-oxidation | [34] |
| 29 | Lipoic acid | NAFLD | SIRT1-PGC-1α/FOXO3α | ↓Oxidative stress | [169] |
| 30 | Methylene blue | NAFLD | SIRT1-PGC-1α/PPARα/AMPK/SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis | [170] |
| 31 | N1-methylnicotinamide | NAFLD | SIRT1-FOXO1 | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Inflammation | [171] |
| 32 | Nicotinamide riboside | NAFLD | SIRT1-FOXO1 | ↓Oxidative stress | [106] |
| 33 | Nicotinamide riboside | NAFLD | SIRT1-NLRP3 | ↓Inflammation | [172] |
| 34 | Nicotinamide riboside | NAFLD | SIRT1-PPAR-γ/ SREBP-1c/ PPARα/ PGC-1α/Nrf1 | ↓Lipogenesis; ↑FA β-oxidation; ↓Inflammation | [80] |
| 35 | Olaparib (PARP inhibitor) | NAFLD | SIRT1-SREBP-1c/ PPARα | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Oxidative stress; ↓Inflammation | [135] |
| 36 | Olaparib (PARP inhibitor) | NAFLD | - | ↑FA β-oxidation; ↓Oxidative stress; ↓Inflammation | [136] |
| 37 | Pifithrin-α ρ-nitro | NAFLD | SIRT1-PGC-1α/PPARα; SIRT1-LKB1/AMPK | ↑FA β-oxidation | [173] |
| 38 | Salvianolic acid B | NAFLD | SIRT1-HMGB1-NF-κB/TLR4 | ↓Inflammation | [126] |
| 39 | (S)YS-51 | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/LKB1/SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Inflammation | [174] |
| 40 | Quercetin | NAFLD | SIRT1-NF-κB | ↓Inflammation | [128] |
| 41 | PJ-34 (PARP inhibitor) | NAFLD | SIRT1- PPARα | ↑FA β-oxidation | [137] |
| 42 | Troxerutin | NAFLD | SIRT1-AMPK | ↓Lipogenesis; ↑FA β-oxidation; ↓Oxidative Stress | [175] |
| 43 | 14-Deoxyandrographolide | AFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/SREBP-1c | ↓Lipogenesis | [176] |
| 44 | 5-Aminoisoquinoline (PARP inhibitor) | AFLD | SIRT1-SREBP-1c/ PGC-1α/ FOXO1 | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Oxidative stress; ↓Inflammation | [135] |
| 45 | Demethyleneberberine | AFLD | SIRT1-AMPK-PGC-1α | ↑FA β-oxidation | [177] |
| 46 | Salvianolic acid B | AFLD | SIRT1-ChREBP | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Inflammation | [127] |
| 47 | Olaparib (PARP inhibitor) | AFLD | SIRT1- PGC-1α/ FOXO1 | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Oxidative stress; ↓Inflammation | [135] |
| 48 | PJ-34 (PARP inhibitor) | AFLD | SIRT1- PPARα/ NF-κB | ↓Lipogenesis; ↑FA β-oxidation; ↓Inflammation | [138] |
| 49 | PJ-34 (PARP inhibitor) | AFLD | SIRT1-SREBP-1c/ PGC-1α/ FOXO1 | ↓Lipogenesis; ↓Oxidative stress; ↓Inflammation | [135] |
| 50 | Rosiglitazone | AFLD | SIRT1-AMPK/PGC-1α/FOXO1 | ↓Lipogenesis; ↑FA β-oxidation | [178] |
Summary of clinical trials on SIRT1 activators for fatty liver diseases and other metabolic diseases.
| Study description | Phase | Identifier | Drugs | Diseases or Conditions | Status | Study period | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies on fatty liver diseases | |||||||||
| 1 | The effects of resveratrol on lipid profiles, liver enzymes, inflammatory factors and hepatic fibrosis in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis patients | II & III | NCT02030977 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | Completed | Jun. 2012-Mar. 2013 | ||
| 2 | Safety and efficacy of resveratrol for the treatment of NAFLD and associated insulin resistance in overweight and obese adolescents | II & III | NCT02216552 | Resveratrol | NAFLD; Obesity | Recruiting | Aug. 2015- | ||
| 3 | Resveratrol in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease | - | NCT01464801 | Resveratrol | NAFLD | Completed | Sep.2011-Jun. 2015 | ||
| 4 | Evaluate the effects of resveratrol on liver fat content, body fat distribution and insulin sensitivity | - | NCT01635114 | Resveratrol | NAFLD; Insulin resistance | Completed | Jun. 2012-Sep. 2015 | ||
| 5 | Long-term investigation of resveratrol on lipid turnover in obese men with NAFLD | - | NCT01446276 | Resveratrol | NAFLD; Obesity | Completed | Nov.2011-Apr. 2014 | ||
| Studies on metabolic diseases (disorders) associated inflammation and/or oxidative stress | |||||||||
| 6 | Effects of resveratrol on inflammation and oxidative stress of non-dialysis chronic kidney diseases patients | III | NCT02433925 | Resveratrol | Chronic renal insufficiency | Completed | Jan. 2013-Dec. 2014 | ||
| 7 | Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects of resveratrol on healthy adults | III | NCT01492114 | Resveratrol | Healthy volunteer | Completed | Jul. 2011-Mar. 2012 | ||
| 8 | Effects of resveratrol on inflammation in type 2 diabetic patients | III | NCT02244879 | Resveratrol | Type 2 diabetes | Completed | Oct 2013-Feb. 2016 | ||
| 9 | Effect of resveratrol on insulin resistance and inflammatory mediators in obese and type 2 diabetic subjects | II & III | NCT01158417 | Resveratrol | Type 2 diabetes; Obesity | Unknown | Dec. 2008- | ||
| 10 | Effect of resveratrol on age-related insulin resistance and inflammation in humans | II | NCT01354977 | Resveratrol | Type 2 diabetes; Insulin resistance | Unknown | Mar. 2008- | ||
| 11 | The effects of trans-resveratrol on insulin resistance, inflammation, and the metabolic syndrome | II | NCT01714102 | Resveratrol | Obesity; Insulin resistance | Active, not recruiting | Oct. 2012- | ||
| 12 | A phase I dose-ranging study to evaluate the activity of SRT2379 on endotoxin induced inflammatory response in healthy male subjects | I | NCT01416376 | SRT2379 | Healthy volunteer treated with LPS | Completed | Aug. 2011-Dec. 2011 | ||
| 13 | A phase I study to evaluate a single oral dose of SRT2379 on the endotoxin induced inflammatory response in healthy male subjects | I | NCT01262911 | SRT2379 | Healthy volunteer treated with LPS | Completed | Feb. 2011-Apr. 2011 | ||
| 14 | A phase I study to evaluate multiple oral doses of SRT2104 on the endotoxin induced inflammatory response in healthy male subjects | I | NCT01014117 | SRT2104 | Healthy volunteer treated with LPS | Completed | Dec. 2009-May. 2010 | ||
| 15 | Long-term investigation of resveratrol on management of metabolic syndrome, osteoporosis and inflammation | - | NCT01412645 | Resveratrol | Metabolic syndrome | Completed | Aug. 2011-Aug. 2013 | ||
| 16 | The effects of resveratrol supplementation on measurements of health and human performance | - | NCT01244360 | Resveratrol | Healthy volunteer | Unknown | Nov. 2010- | ||
| 17 | Potential beneficial effects of resveratrol on obesity, metabolic syndrome and inflammation | - | NCT01150955 | Resveratrol | Metabolic syndrome; Obesity | Completed | Oct. 2010-Nov. 2011 | ||
| Studies on other metabolic diseases (disorders) at phase IV | |||||||||
| 18 | Effect of resveratrol on improving insulin sensitivity and preserving beta cell function following gestational diabetes | IV | NCT01997762 | Resveratrol | Gestational diabetes | Unknown | May 2014- | ||
| 19 | Effects of simvastatin and micronized trans-resveratrol treatment on polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) patients | IV | NCT02766803 | SRT501; Simvastatin | PCOS; Insulin resistance | Recruiting | May 2016- | ||
| Studies on other newly developed potent SIRT1 activators | |||||||||
| 20 | A phase II study to assess the safety, tolerability, and activity of oral SRT2104 capsules administered in type 2 diabetes subjects | II | NCT01018017 | SRT2104 | Type 2 diabetes | Completed | Mar. 2010-Dec. 2010 | ||
| 21 | A phase II study to assess the safety and pharmacokinetics of SRT2104 in type 2 diabetic human subjects | II | NCT00937326 | SRT2104 | Type 2 diabetes | Completed | Aug. 2009-Sep. 2010 | ||
| 22 | A phase I study in healthy male volunteers to investigate different doses of SRT3025 for the treatment of metabolic diseases | I | NCT01340911 | SRT3025 | Healthy volunteer | Completed | Jun. 2011-Feb. 2012 | ||
| 23 | A phase I study to assess the pharmacokinetics of SRT2104 administered as an oral suspension or capsule formulation to normal healthy volunteers | I | NCT00938275 | SRT2104 | Healthy volunteer | Completed | Jan. 2009-Mar. 2009 | ||
| 24 | A phase I study to assess the pharmacokinetics, safety and tolerability of SRT2104 administered to normal healthy male volunteers | I | NCT00933062 | SRT2104 | Healthy volunteer | Completed | Mar. 2009-May 2009 | ||
| 25 | Evaluation of the pharmacokinetics and the absolute bioavailability of SRT2104 in healthy male subjects | I | NCT00937872 | SRT2104 | Healthy volunteer | Completed | Nov. 2008-Dec. 2008 | ||
| 26 | A phase I study to assess the safety of oral SRT2104 and its effects on vascular dysfunction in healthy and type 2 diabetes subjects | I | NCT01031108 | SRT2104 | Type 2 diabetes | Completed | May 2010-Oct. 2011 | ||
| 27 | A phase I study to assess the safety and pharmacokinetics of SRT2104 in normal healthy male volunteers | I | NCT00933530 | SRT2104 | Healthy volunteer | Completed | May 2008-Nov. 2008 | ||
| 28 | A phase I study to assess the safety and pharmacokinetics of SRT2379 in normal healthy male volunteers | I | NCT01018628 | SRT2379 | Healthy volunteer | Completed | Dec. 2009-Aug. 2010 | ||