| Literature DB >> 34301918 |
Li Ning1, Xiong Rui1, Wang Bo2, Geng Qing3.
Abstract
Histone deacetylase 3 (HDAC3) plays a crucial role in chromatin remodeling, which, in turn, regulates gene transcription. Hence, HDAC3 has been implicated in various diseases, including ischemic injury, fibrosis, neurodegeneration, infections, and inflammatory conditions. In addition, HDAC3 plays vital roles under physiological conditions by regulating circadian rhythms, metabolism, and development. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge of the physiological functions of HDAC3 and its role in organ injury. We also discuss the therapeutic value of HDAC3 in various diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34301918 PMCID: PMC8302660 DOI: 10.1038/s41419-021-04019-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Dis Impact factor: 8.469
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the histone acetylation and deacetylation by HATs and HDACs.
A Condensation and relaxation of chromatin due to histone deacetylation and acetylation, respectively. Histone acetylation levels are determined by the interplay between HATs and HDACs. Activation of HDACs leads to a net decrease of histone acetylation, chromatin condensation, and transcriptional repression. Activation of HATs results in a net increase of histone acetylation, chromatin relaxation, and transcriptional activation. B The chemical formula of histone acetylation and deacetylation. C Nuclear receptor co-repressor complexes containing HDAC3, GPS2, TBLX, and TBL1XR bind to nuclear receptors without ligands to induce transcriptional repression via histone deacetylation. D Nuclear receptor-mediated ligand binding inhibits the co-repressor complex and recruits co-activators, facilitating histone acetylation and gene transcription.
Fig. 2The cellular localization of the four classes of histone deacetylases.
Class I, IIA, VI, and part of class III HDACs are mainly found in the nucleus. HDAC3, HDAC4, HDAC7, HDAC9, SIRT1, and SIRT2 shuffle between the nucleus and cytoplasm. Class IIB HDACs, including HDAC6 and HDAC10, are localized in the cytoplasm. Class III HDACs, including SIRT3, SIRT4, and SIRT5, are localized in mitochondria.
Fig. 3The physiological functions and pathogenic effects of HDAC3.
Under physiological condition, HDAC3 is mainly responsible for the development and homeostasis of liver, heart, brain, lung, bone, pancreas, intestine, and adipocyte. However, the abnormal expression of HDAC3 also contributes to organ injury including heart, brain, pancreas, kidney, lung, and liver.
Subcellular localization of HDAC3 and its roles in different disease models.
| Models | Subcellular localization | Key mechanisms | Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cerebral IRI | Shuttling between the nucleus and the cytosol in microglia | Deacetylating p65 at K122 in the cytosol and interacting with p65 in the nucleus to induce neuroinflammation by activating cGAS-STING axis | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Ischemic brain damage | Mainly concentrating in the nucleus in microglia 24 h following ischemia and gradually spreading to cytoplasm 72 h following ischemia | Deacetylating STAT1 and subsequently promoted STAT1 phosphorylation, contributing to brain damage via the regulation of AIM2 | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Cerebral IRI in the diabetic state | Not detected | Promoting the cerebral infarct volume and cytotoxicity by upregulating Bmal1 | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Ischemic stroke | Distributed both in the nucleus and cytoplasm in cortical neurons before ischemic preconditioning; distributed mainly in the cytoplasm after ischemic preconditioning treatment | Potentiating transcriptional initiation of oxidation relative genes involving | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Chronic constriction injury | Mainly concentrating in the nucleus in the hippocampus | Deacetylating H3 and H4 in the hippocampus and triggering memory impairment | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Alzheimer’s disease | Both nucleus and the cytosol in HEK/APPsw cells. | Increasing Aβ1–42 accumulation and both tau acetylation and phosphorylation at disease residues, thus impairing learning and memory | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Acute lung injury | Shuttling from the cytosol to nucleus in bronchial epithelial cells | Interacting with p65 in the cytosol and translocating to the nucleus, eventually triggering an inflammatory response | Non-enzymatic activity | [ |
| Myocardial infarction | Not detected | Decreasing miR-19a-3p and elevating CDK2, leading to myocardial infarction | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Myocardial infarction | Nucleus in macrophage | Forming HDAC3-NCoR1 repressor complex and inhibiting | Non-enzymatic activity | [ |
| Diabetic myocardial IRI | Nucleus in cardiomyocytes | Regulating circadian gene oscillations to trigger mitophagy dysfunction and myocardial IRI | Non-enzymatic activity | [ |
| Diabetic endothelial dysfunction | Cytosol in endothelial cells | Inhibiting Nrf2 signaling through the modulation of Keap1 and Nox4 | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Renal fibrosis | The nucleus of renal tubular cells | Inhibiting Klotho transcription and mediating myofibroblast transdifferentiation by decreasing acetylations of H3K4, H3K9, and H4K5 thus promotes renal fibrosis | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Diabetic renal damage | Not detected | Epigenetically modulating miR-10a, subsequently affecting CREB1 and fibronectin formation | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Diabetic hepatic damage | Mainly concentrating in the cytosol in hepatocyte | Decreasing Nrf2 activity by inhibiting miR-200a expression with a concomitant increase in Keap1 to block hepatic FGF21 synthesis. | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Diet-induced obesity | The nucleus in intestinal epithelial cells | Regulating expression of microbiota-dependent metabolic pathways including | Enzymatic activity | [ |
| Diabetes mellitus | Both nucleus and the cytosol in β-cells | Affecting insulin secretion, glucose tolerance, lipotoxicity, insulin resistance, and inflammation | Enzymatic activity | [ |
Fig. 4The role of HDAC3 in brain injury.
HDAC3 promotes neuronal cell death via multiple mechanisms. HDAC3 is upregulated in microglia after ischemia stimulation, deacetylating p65 at K122. Deacetylated p65 translocates into the nucleus activating the transcription of cGAS. Ischemia-induced mitochondrial DNA is recognized by cGAS, which activates the microglial cGAS-STING-IRF3 pathway and promotes neuroinflammation. In addition, HDAC3 inhibits the activation of the AIM inflammasome and induces pyroptosis. HDAC3 also induces apoptosis, autophagy, and oxidative stress by inhibiting the expression of BMAL1.
Fig. 5Scheme of HDAC3-mediated renal fibrosis.
Renal injury enhances the production of TGF-β, which promotes myofibroblast differentiation and activates Hdac3 transcription and Smad signaling. Subsequently, HDAC3, together with NF-κB and NCoR, bind to and deacetylate the Klotho promoter, downregulating Klotho and exacerbating renal fibrosis. HDAC3 inhibition preserves the expression of Klotho, inhibiting the TGF-β receptor and alleviating renal fibrosis.
Common HDAC3 inhibitors and their role in solid organ injury.
| Inhibitor | Models | Key molecular signaling | Major outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RGFP966 | Ischemic brain damage | Acetylating and dephosphorylating STAT1, inhibiting the AIM2 inflammasome | Protecting against inflammatory response and alleviating ischemic stroke | [ |
| Cerebral IRI in diabetic state | Inhibiting oxidative stress, apoptosis, and autophagy by upregulating Bmal1 | Decreasing the cerebral infarct volume and inhibiting cytotoxicity | [ | |
| Chronic neuropathic injury | Regulating synaptic plasticity | Improving memory impairment | [ | |
| Ischemic brain damage | Inhibiting the recruitment of HDAC3 to the promoter regions of | Improving neurotoxicity and neuronal injury | [ | |
| Acute lung injury | Repressing Hsp90-dependent RhoA activity | Inhibiting endothelial barrier dysfunction and alleviating LPS-induced lung injury | [ | |
| Myocardial IRI in diabetic state | Regulating HDAC3/SIRT1 circuit by regulating Bmal1-mediated autophagy | Alleviating myocardial IRI | [ | |
| Myocardial IRI in diabetic state | Activating the Rev-erbα/BMAL1 circadian pathway to inhibit mitophagy | Alleviating myocardial IRI | [ | |
| Renal fibrosis | Blocking HDAC3 activity and regulating the expression of Klotho | Alleviating renal fibrosis and improving renal function | [ | |
| MS275 | Seizure-induced brain damage | Downregulating p38 by decreasing histone H3 and H4 methylation and increasing histone H3 and H4 acetylation | Alleviating inflammation and tissue damage | [ |
| Acute lung injury | Maintaining the balance between the anti-inflammatory and proinflammatory IL-10 and IL-12b | Relieving macrophage-induced pulmonary inflammation | [ | |
| BRD3308 | Type 1 diabetes | Decreasing the number of apoptotic β-cells | Inhibiting pancreatic islet infiltration and preventing β-cell death | [ |
| MI192 | Photothrombotic stroke | Decreasing apoptosis and deacetylation of α-tubulin and upregulating GAP-43 in the cerebral cortex | Eliminating tissue infarct and improving motor activity | [ |
| Valproic acid | Sepsis-induced cardiac injury | Increasing histone acetylation in the PTEN promoter and inhibiting the AKT/mTOR pathway | Promoting cardiac autophagy and reducing mitochondrial damage, oxidative stress, and inflammation in cardiac tissues | [ |
| Traumatic brain injury | Inhibiting oxidative stress and autophagy by activating Nrf2/ARE signaling | Reducing microglial activation and inflammation | [ | |
| Nimbolide | Acute lung injury | Blocking NF-κB and HDAC-3 nuclear translocation mediated by TNF-α | Alleviating oxidative stress, inflammation, and pathological injury | [ |
| Betaine | Hypothalamic neural injury | Blocking TLR4/NF-κB pathway activation and repressing HDAC3 expression | Inhibiting hypothalamic astrogliosis and inflammation | [ |
| Scriptaid | Ischemic brain damage | Increasing the acetylation of H3 and H4 | Decreasing the infarct volume and neuronal degeneration, improving their neurobehavioral dysfunction | [ |
| Chrysophanol | Acute lung injury | Promoting HMGB1/HDAC3/NF-κB/p65 complex formation | Relieving lung lesions and enhancing superoxide dismutase levels | [ |
| miR-193b-39 | Brain injury after subarachnoid hemorrhage | Acetylating p65 by decreasing the expression and activity of HDAC3 | Mitigating behavioral impairment, brain edema, blood-brain barrier injury, and neurodegeneration | [ |
| miR-494 | Ischemic brain damage | Inhibiting the expression of neuronal ataxin-3 and HDAC3 and increasing acetyl-H3K9 levels | Decreasing neuronal apoptosis and infarct size | [ |
| miR-19a-3p | Myocardial IRI | Reducing the level of CDK2 | Improving cardiac function and attenuating pathological change | [ |