Identifying the functional contribution of the defatty-acylase activity of SIRT6
Mice, Knockout
Models, Molecular
0303 health sciences
Article
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
HEK293 Cells
Mutation
NIH 3T3 Cells
Animals
Humans
Sirtuins
Mutant Proteins
Cell Proliferation
DOI:
10.1038/nchembio.2106
Publication Date:
2016-06-20T18:25:35Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
Mammalian sirtuin 6 (SIRT6) exhibits many pivotal functions and multiple enzymatic activities, but the contribution of each activity to the various functions is unclear. We identified a SIRT6 mutant (G60A) that possesses efficient defatty-acylase activity but has substantially decreased deacetylase activity in vitro and no detectable deacetylase activity in cells. The G60A mutant has a decreased ability to bind NAD(+), but the presence of fatty-acyl lysine peptides restores NAD(+) binding, explaining the retention of the defatty-acylase activity. Using this mutant, we found that the defatty-acylase activity of SIRT6 regulates the secretion of numerous proteins. Notably, many ribosomal proteins were secreted via exosomes from Sirt6 knockout mouse embryonic fibroblasts, and these exosomes increased NIH 3T3 cell proliferation compared with control exosomes. Our data indicate that distinct activities of SIRT6 regulate different pathways and that the G60A mutant is a useful tool to study the contribution of defatty-acylase activity to SIRT6's various functions.
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