A predicted unstructured C-terminal loop domain in SIRT1 is required for cathepsin B cleavage

Citation:

Ashok Kumar, Daitsh, Yutti , Ben-Aderet, Louisa , Qiq, Omar , Elayyan, Jinan , Batshon, George , Reich, Eli , Maatuf, Yonatan Harel , Engel, Stanislav , and Dvir-Ginzberg, Mona . 2018. “A Predicted Unstructured C-Terminal Loop Domain In Sirt1 Is Required For Cathepsin B Cleavage”. Journal Of Cell Science, 131. doi:10.1242/jcs.214973. Supplementary data

Abstract:

The C-terminus of SIRT1 can be cleaved by cathepsin B at amino acid H533 to generate a lower-functioning, N-terminally intact 75 kDa polypeptide (75SIRT1) that might be involved in age-related pathologies. However, the mechanisms underlying cathepsin B docking to and cleavage of SIRT1 are unclear. Here, we first identified several 75SIRT1 variants that are augmented with aging correlatively with increased cathepsin B levels in various mouse tissues, highlighting the possible role of this cleavage event in age-related pathologies. Then, based on H533 point mutation and structural modeling, we generated a functionally intact ΔSIRT1 mutant, lacking the internal amino acids 528–543 (a predicted C-terminus loop domain), which exhibits resistance to cathepsin B cleavage in vitro and in cell cultures. Finally, we showed that cells expressing ΔSIRT1 under pro-inflammatory stress are more likely to undergo caspase 9- dependent apoptosis than those expressing 75SIRT1. Thus, our data suggest that the 15-amino acid predicted loop motif embedded in the C-terminus of SIRT1 is susceptible to proteolytic cleavage by cathepsin B, leading to the formation of several N-terminally intact SIRT1 truncated variants in various aging mouse tissues.This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper.
Last updated on 09/14/2021