4.7 Review

Protective effects of sirtuins in cardiovascular diseases: from bench to bedside

Journal

EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL
Volume 36, Issue 48, Pages 3404-U120

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehv290

Keywords

Sirtuins; Cardiovascular; Translational; Metabolism; Aging

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation
  2. Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne
  3. NIH/NIA
  4. Paul Glenn Foundation for Medical Research
  5. University Research Priority Program Integrative Human Physiology at the University of Zurich
  6. University of Zurich
  7. Sirtris, a GlaxoSmithKline company
  8. Hartmann-Muller Foundation
  9. Zurich, Heart House-Foundation for Cardiovascular Research, Switzerland
  10. Foundation for Cardiovascular Research, Zurich, Switzerland

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Sirtuins (Sirt1-Sirt7) comprise a family of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD(+))- dependent enzymes. While deacetylation reflects their main task, some of them have deacylase, adenosine diphosphate-ribosylase, demalonylase, glutarylase, and desuccinylase properties. Activated upon caloric restriction and exercise, they control critical cellular processes in the nucleus, cytoplasm, and mitochondria to maintain metabolic homeostasis, reduce cellular damage and dampen inflammation-all of which serve to protect against a variety of age-related diseases, including cardiovascular pathologies. This review focuses on the cardiovascular effects of Sirt1, Sirt3, Sirt6, and Sirt7. Most is known about Sirt1. This deacetylase protects from endothelial dysfunction, atherothrombosis, diet-induced obesity, type 2 diabetes, liver steatosis, and myocardial infarction. Sirt3 provides beneficial effects in the context of left ventricular hypertrophy, cardiomyopathy, oxidative stress, metabolic homeostasis, and dyslipidaemia. Sirt6 is implicated in ameliorating dyslipidaemia, cellular senescence, and left ventricular hypertrophy. Sirt7 plays a role in lipid metabolism and cardiomyopathies. Most of these data were derived from experimental findings in genetically modified mice, where NFkB, Pcsk9, low-density lipoprotein-receptor, PPAR gamma, superoxide dismutase 2, poly[adenosine diphosphate-ribose] polymerase 1, and endothelial nitric oxide synthase were identified among others as crucial molecular targets and/or partners of sirtuins. Of note, there is translational evidence for a role of sirtuins in patients with endothelial dysfunction, type 1 or type 2 diabetes and longevity. Given the availability of specific Sirt1 activators or pan-sirtuin activators that boost levels of the sirtuin cofactor NAD(+), we anticipate that this field will move quickly from bench to bedside.

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