| Literature DB >> 31261609 |
Débora Kristina Alves-Fernandes1, Miriam Galvonas Jasiulionis2.
Abstract
Sirtuin-1 (SIRT1) is a class-III histone deacetylase (HDAC), an NAD+-dependent enzyme deeply involved in gene regulation, genome stability maintenance, apoptosis, autophagy, senescence, proliferation, aging, and tumorigenesis. It also has a key role in the epigenetic regulation of tissue homeostasis and many diseases by deacetylating both histone and non-histone targets. Different studies have shown ambiguous implications of SIRT1 as both a tumor suppressor and tumor promoter. However, this contradictory role seems to be determined by the cell type and SIRT1 localization. SIRT1 upregulation has already been demonstrated in some cancer cells, such as acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and primary colon, prostate, melanoma, and non-melanoma skin cancers, while SIRT1 downregulation was described in breast cancer and hepatic cell carcinomas. Even though new functions of SIRT1 have been characterized, the underlying mechanisms that define its precise role on DNA damage and repair and their contribution to cancer development remains underexplored. Here, we discuss the recent findings on the interplay among SIRT1, oxidative stress, and DNA repair machinery and its impact on normal and cancer cells.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage/repair; SIRT1; cancer development; epigenetics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31261609 PMCID: PMC6651129 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20133153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
The role of SIRT1 and its effects in response to DNA damage.
| Role of SIRT1 | Effects | Cell or Tissue Type | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Absence of 6-4PP and Pt-GG in heterochromatin associated with SIRT1 | Human fibroblasts | [ |
| Decreased levels of 8-OHdG after the increase in SIRT1 activity and mRNA level | Rat hippocampus | [ | |
|
| Relocalization of Sir2/3/4 and de-repression of epigenetically silencing genes in response to DNA damage | Yeast | [ |
| Relocalization of SIRT1 to DSBs followed by transcriptional changes | Mammalian stem cells | [ | |
| Recruitment of key epigenetic proteins (DNMTs, EZH2) to DNA damage site | Normal and cancer cells | [ | |
| Deacetylation of HAT (hMOF) and E2F1 leading to downregulation of genes involved in DNA repair and genomic stability | Cancer cells | [ | |
| Recruitment of DNA repair proteins contributing with viral activity, including gene transcription | Keratinocytes containing HPV episomes | [ | |
|
| Deacetylation of p53 interfering in cell death | Normal and cancer cells | reviewed in [ |
| Deacetylation of γH2AX, Rad51, BRCA1 and NBS1, regulating the foci formation | MEFs | [ | |
| Interaction with Ku70 protein belonging to NHEJ | Cancer cells | [ | |
| Deacetylation of FOXO family favoring the expression of target repair genes, cell cycle arrest and resistance to oxidative stress | Normal cells | [ | |
| Regulation of many important proteins to DDR and DNA repair, including ATM, NBS1, WRN, KAP1, XPA, MSH2, MSH6, APEX1 | Normal and cancer cells | [ |
Figure 1SIRT1 as an epigenetic regulator and DNA repair response modulator. SIRT1 contributes to heterochromatin formation and can be associated with transcriptionally repressed repetitive DNA loci (1); upon stress, SIRT1 can be dissociated from these regions towards the DNA damage site, resulting in chromatin reorganization which favors transcriptional changes (2); SIRT1 recruits epigenetic machinery to the transcriptional silencing around the DNA damage site (3); SIRT1 also participates in the recruitment and deacetylation of DDR (4) and DNA repair proteins, (5) helping in many steps of repair pathways.