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Small molecule activators of SIRT1 replicate signaling pathways triggered by calorie restriction in vivo
J. Joshua Smith, Renée Deehan Kenney, David Gagné, Brian P. Frushour, William Ladd, Heidi L. Galonek, Kristine Israelian, Jeffrey Song, Giedre Razvadauskaite, Amy V. Lynch, David P. Carney, Robin J. Johnson, Siva Lavu, André Iffland, Peter J. Elliott
BMC Systems Biology · 2009 · ▲ 211 citations
Mitochondrial dysfunction
Altered intercellular communication
Chronic inflammation
Caloric restriction
Yeast
Cell culture / in vitro
Human
Mouse
In vitro
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Calorie restriction (CR) produces a number of health benefits and ameliorates diseases of aging such as type 2 diabetes. The components of the pathways downstream of CR may provide intervention points for developing therapeutics for treating diseases of aging. The NAD+-dependent protein deacetylase SIRT1 has been implicated as one of the key downstream regulators of CR in yeast, rodents, and humans. Small molecule activators of SIRT1 have been identified that exhibit efficacy in animal models of diseases typically associated with aging including type 2 diabetes. To identify molecular processes induced in the liver of mice treated with two structurally distinct SIRT1 activators, SIRT501 (formulated resveratrol) and SRT1720, for three days, we utilized a systems biology approach and applied Causal Network Modeling (CNM) on gene expression data to elucidate downstream effects of SIRT1 activation. RESULTS: Here we demonstrate that SIRT1 activators recapitulate many of the molecular events downstream of CR in vivo, such as enhancing mitochondrial biogenesis, improving metabolic signaling pathways, and blunting pro-inflammatory pathways in mice fed a high fat, high calorie diet. CONCLUSION: CNM of gene expression data from mice treated with SRT501 or SRT1720 in combination with supporting in vitro and in vivo data demonstrates that SRT501 and SRT1720 produce a signaling profile that mirrors CR, improves glucose and insulin homeostasis, and acts via SIRT1 activation in vivo. Taken together these results are encouraging regarding the use of small molecule activators of SIRT1 for therapeutic intervention into type 2 diabetes, a strategy which is currently being investigated in multiple clinical trials.
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- 10.1186/1752-0509-3-31
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- 2026-06-15 MST
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APA
Smith, J.J., Kenney, R.D., Gagné, D., Frushour, B.P., Ladd, W., Galonek, H.L., Israelian, K., Song, J., Razvadauskaite, G., Lynch, A.V., Carney, D.P., Johnson, R.J., Lavu, S., Iffland, A., Elliott, P.J., Lambert, P., Elliston, K., Jirousek, M.R., Milne, J.C., & Boss, O. (2009). Small molecule activators of SIRT1 replicate signaling pathways triggered by calorie restriction in vivo. <em>BMC Systems Biology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-3-31
Vancouver
Smith JJ, Kenney RD, Gagné D, Frushour BP, Ladd W, Galonek HL, et al. Small molecule activators of SIRT1 replicate signaling pathways triggered by calorie restriction in vivo. BMC Systems Biology. 2009. doi:10.1186/1752-0509-3-31.
BibTeX
@article{j2009Smallm,
title = {Small molecule activators of SIRT1 replicate signaling pathways triggered by calorie restriction in vivo},
author = {J. Joshua Smith and Renée Deehan Kenney and David Gagné and Brian P. Frushour and William Ladd and Heidi L. Galonek and Kristine Israelian and Jeffrey Song and Giedre Razvadauskaite and Amy V. Lynch and David P. Carney and Robin J. Johnson and Siva Lavu and André Iffland and Peter J. Elliott and Philip Lambert and Keith Elliston and Michael R. Jirousek and Jill C. Milne and Olivier Boss},
journal = {BMC Systems Biology},
year = {2009},
doi = {10.1186/1752-0509-3-31},
}
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