4.6 Article

Ablation of Sirtuin5 in the postnatal mouse heart results in protein succinylation and normal survival in response to chronic pressure overload

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 293, Issue 27, Pages 10630-10645

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.002187

Keywords

sirtuin; protein acylation; proteomics; stress; cardiac hypertrophy

Funding

  1. American Heart Association [12SDG8840004, 12IRG9010008]
  2. NIA, National Institutes of Health [R01AG045351]
  3. NIDDK, National Institutes of Health [P30DK096493]
  4. Ruth L. Kirschstein National Service Research Award F31 Predoctoral Fellowship [1F31HL127959-03]
  5. NIGMS, National Institutes of Health [5T32GM007105-40]
  6. NHLBI, National Institutes of Health [1K08HL125905-01]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Mitochondrial Sirtuin 5 (SIRT5) is an NAD(+)-dependent demalonylase, desuccinylase, and deglutarylase that controls several metabolic pathways. A number of recent studies point to SIRT5 desuccinylase activity being important in maintaining cardiac function and metabolism under stress. Previously, we described a phenotype of increased mortality in whole-body SIRT5KO mice exposed to chronic pressure overload compared with their littermate WT controls. To determine whether the survival phenotype we reported was due to a cardiac-intrinsic or cardiac-extrinsic effect of SIRT5, we developed a tamoxifen-inducible, heart-specific SIRT5 knockout (SIRT5KO) mouse model. Using our new animal model, we discovered that postnatal cardiac ablation of Sirt5 resulted in persistent accumulation of protein succinylation up to 30 weeks after SIRT5 depletion. Succinyl proteomics revealed that succinylation increased on proteins of oxidative metabolism between 15 and 31 weeks after ablation. Heart-specific SIRT5KO mice were exposed to chronic pressure overload to induce cardiac hypertrophy. We found that, in contrast to whole-body SIRT5KO mice, there was no difference in survival between heart-specific SIRT5KO mice and their littermate controls. Overall, the data presented here suggest that survival of SIRT5KO mice may be dictated by a multitissue or prenatal effect of SIRT5.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available