CNS SIRT3 expression is altered by reactive oxygen species and in Alzheimer's disease.

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Abstract

Progressive mitochondrial dysfunction contributes to neuronal degeneration in age-mediated disease. An essential regulator of mitochondrial function is the deacetylase, sirtuin 3 (SIRT3). Here we investigate a role for CNS Sirt3 in mitochondrial responses to reactive oxygen species (ROS)- and Alzheimer's disease (AD)-mediated stress. Pharmacological augmentation of mitochondrial ROS increases Sirt3 expression in primary hippocampal culture with SIRT3 over-expression being neuroprotective. Furthermore, Sirt3 expression mirrors spatiotemporal deposition of β-amyloid in an AD mouse model and is also upregulated in AD patient temporal neocortex. Thus, our data suggest a role for SIRT3 in mechanisms sensing and tackling ROS- and AD-mediated mitochondrial stress.

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Weir, H. J. M., Murray, T. K., Kehoe, P. G., Love, S., Verdin, E. M., O’Neill, M. J., … Balthasar, N. (2012). CNS SIRT3 expression is altered by reactive oxygen species and in Alzheimer’s disease. PloS One, 7(11). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048225

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