Sirtuins as molecular targets, mediators, and protective agents in metal‑induced toxicity
Само за регистроване кориснике
2021
Аутори
Tinkov, AlexeyNguyen, Thuy
Santamaria, Abe
Bowman, Aaron
Buha-Đorđević, Aleksandra

Paoliello, Monica Maria
Skalny, Anatoly
Aschner, Michael
Чланак у часопису (Објављена верзија)

Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документуАпстракт
Metal dyshomeostasis, and especially overexposure, is known to cause adverse health effects due to modulation of a variety of metabolic pathways. An increasing body of literature has demonstrated that metal exposure may affect SIRT signaling, although the existing data are insufficient. Therefore, in this review we discuss the available data (PubMed-Medline, Google Scholar) on the influence of metal overload on sirtuin (SIRT) signaling and its association with other mechanisms involved in metal-induced toxicity. The existing data demonstrate that cadmium (Cd), mercury (Hg), arsenic (As), lead (Pb), aluminium (Al), hexavalent chromium (CrVI), manganese (Mn), iron (Fe), and copper (Cu) can inhibit SIRT1 activity. In addition, an inhibitory effect of Cd, Pb, As, and Fe on SIRT3 has been demonstrated. In turn, metal-induced inhibition of SIRT was shown to affect deacetylation of target proteins including FOXO, PGC1α, p53 and NF-kB. Increased acetylation downregulates PGC1α signaling pathwa...y, resulting in cellular altered redox status and increased susceptibility to oxidative stress, as well as decreased mitochondrial biogenesis. Lower rates of LKB1 deacetylation may be responsible for metal-induced decreases in AMPK activity and subsequent metabolic disturbances. A shift to the acetylated FOXO results in increased expression of pro-apoptotic genes which upregulates apoptosis together with increased p53 signaling. Correspondingly, decreased NF-kB deacetylation results in upregulation of target genes of proinflammatory cytokines, enzymes, and cellular adhesion molecules thus promoting inflammation. Therefore, alterations in sirtuin activity may at least partially mediate metal-induced metabolic disturbances that have been implicated in neurotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, cardiotoxicity, and other toxic effects of heavy metals.
Кључне речи:
Apoptosis / Inflammation / Metals / Antioxidants / Mitochondrial biogenesis / SirtuinИзвор:
Archives of Toxicology, 2021Издавач:
- Springer
Финансирање / пројекти:
- DecodExpo - Decoding the Role of Exposome in Endocrine Health (RS-6066532)
- Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation within the framework of state support for the creation and development of World-Class Research Centers “Digital biodesign and personalized healthcare” No075-15-2020-92
- Grants from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)—R01ES10563 and NIEHS R01ES07331
DOI: 10.1007/s00204-021-03048-6
ISSN: 0340-5761
WoS: 000653614200003
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85106413049
Институција/група
PharmacyTY - JOUR AU - Tinkov, Alexey AU - Nguyen, Thuy AU - Santamaria, Abe AU - Bowman, Aaron AU - Buha-Đorđević, Aleksandra AU - Paoliello, Monica Maria AU - Skalny, Anatoly AU - Aschner, Michael PY - 2021 UR - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3910 AB - Metal dyshomeostasis, and especially overexposure, is known to cause adverse health effects due to modulation of a variety of metabolic pathways. An increasing body of literature has demonstrated that metal exposure may affect SIRT signaling, although the existing data are insufficient. Therefore, in this review we discuss the available data (PubMed-Medline, Google Scholar) on the influence of metal overload on sirtuin (SIRT) signaling and its association with other mechanisms involved in metal-induced toxicity. The existing data demonstrate that cadmium (Cd), mercury (Hg), arsenic (As), lead (Pb), aluminium (Al), hexavalent chromium (CrVI), manganese (Mn), iron (Fe), and copper (Cu) can inhibit SIRT1 activity. In addition, an inhibitory effect of Cd, Pb, As, and Fe on SIRT3 has been demonstrated. In turn, metal-induced inhibition of SIRT was shown to affect deacetylation of target proteins including FOXO, PGC1α, p53 and NF-kB. Increased acetylation downregulates PGC1α signaling pathway, resulting in cellular altered redox status and increased susceptibility to oxidative stress, as well as decreased mitochondrial biogenesis. Lower rates of LKB1 deacetylation may be responsible for metal-induced decreases in AMPK activity and subsequent metabolic disturbances. A shift to the acetylated FOXO results in increased expression of pro-apoptotic genes which upregulates apoptosis together with increased p53 signaling. Correspondingly, decreased NF-kB deacetylation results in upregulation of target genes of proinflammatory cytokines, enzymes, and cellular adhesion molecules thus promoting inflammation. Therefore, alterations in sirtuin activity may at least partially mediate metal-induced metabolic disturbances that have been implicated in neurotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, cardiotoxicity, and other toxic effects of heavy metals. PB - Springer T2 - Archives of Toxicology T1 - Sirtuins as molecular targets, mediators, and protective agents in metal‑induced toxicity DO - 10.1007/s00204-021-03048-6 ER -
@article{ author = "Tinkov, Alexey and Nguyen, Thuy and Santamaria, Abe and Bowman, Aaron and Buha-Đorđević, Aleksandra and Paoliello, Monica Maria and Skalny, Anatoly and Aschner, Michael", year = "2021", abstract = "Metal dyshomeostasis, and especially overexposure, is known to cause adverse health effects due to modulation of a variety of metabolic pathways. An increasing body of literature has demonstrated that metal exposure may affect SIRT signaling, although the existing data are insufficient. Therefore, in this review we discuss the available data (PubMed-Medline, Google Scholar) on the influence of metal overload on sirtuin (SIRT) signaling and its association with other mechanisms involved in metal-induced toxicity. The existing data demonstrate that cadmium (Cd), mercury (Hg), arsenic (As), lead (Pb), aluminium (Al), hexavalent chromium (CrVI), manganese (Mn), iron (Fe), and copper (Cu) can inhibit SIRT1 activity. In addition, an inhibitory effect of Cd, Pb, As, and Fe on SIRT3 has been demonstrated. In turn, metal-induced inhibition of SIRT was shown to affect deacetylation of target proteins including FOXO, PGC1α, p53 and NF-kB. Increased acetylation downregulates PGC1α signaling pathway, resulting in cellular altered redox status and increased susceptibility to oxidative stress, as well as decreased mitochondrial biogenesis. Lower rates of LKB1 deacetylation may be responsible for metal-induced decreases in AMPK activity and subsequent metabolic disturbances. A shift to the acetylated FOXO results in increased expression of pro-apoptotic genes which upregulates apoptosis together with increased p53 signaling. Correspondingly, decreased NF-kB deacetylation results in upregulation of target genes of proinflammatory cytokines, enzymes, and cellular adhesion molecules thus promoting inflammation. Therefore, alterations in sirtuin activity may at least partially mediate metal-induced metabolic disturbances that have been implicated in neurotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, cardiotoxicity, and other toxic effects of heavy metals.", publisher = "Springer", journal = "Archives of Toxicology", title = "Sirtuins as molecular targets, mediators, and protective agents in metal‑induced toxicity", doi = "10.1007/s00204-021-03048-6" }
Tinkov, A., Nguyen, T., Santamaria, A., Bowman, A., Buha-Đorđević, A., Paoliello, M. M., Skalny, A.,& Aschner, M.. (2021). Sirtuins as molecular targets, mediators, and protective agents in metal‑induced toxicity. in Archives of Toxicology Springer.. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00204-021-03048-6
Tinkov A, Nguyen T, Santamaria A, Bowman A, Buha-Đorđević A, Paoliello MM, Skalny A, Aschner M. Sirtuins as molecular targets, mediators, and protective agents in metal‑induced toxicity. in Archives of Toxicology. 2021;. doi:10.1007/s00204-021-03048-6 .
Tinkov, Alexey, Nguyen, Thuy, Santamaria, Abe, Bowman, Aaron, Buha-Đorđević, Aleksandra, Paoliello, Monica Maria, Skalny, Anatoly, Aschner, Michael, "Sirtuins as molecular targets, mediators, and protective agents in metal‑induced toxicity" in Archives of Toxicology (2021), https://doi.org/10.1007/s00204-021-03048-6 . .