Anthony A. Sauve

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Organization: Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Department: Department of Pharmacology
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Co-reporter:Yue Yang, Anthony A. Sauve
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Proteins and Proteomics 2016 Volume 1864(Issue 12) pp:1787-1800
Publication Date(Web):December 2016
DOI:10.1016/j.bbapap.2016.06.014
We survey the historical development of scientific knowledge surrounding Vitamin B3, and describe the active metabolite forms of Vitamin B3, the pyridine dinucleotides NAD+ and NADP+ which are essential to cellular processes of energy metabolism, cell protection and biosynthesis. The study of NAD+ has become reinvigorated by new understandings that dynamics within NAD+ metabolism trigger major signaling processes coupled to effectors (sirtuins, PARPs, and CD38) that reprogram cellular metabolism using NAD+ as an effector substrate. Cellular adaptations include stimulation of mitochondrial biogenesis, a process fundamental to adjusting cellular and tissue physiology to reduced nutrient availability and/or increased energy demand. Several mammalian metabolic pathways converge to NAD+, including tryptophan-derived de novo pathways, nicotinamide salvage pathways, nicotinic acid salvage and nucleoside salvage pathways incorporating nicotinamide riboside and nicotinic acid riboside. Key discoveries highlight a therapeutic potential for targeting NAD+ biosynthetic pathways for treatment of human diseases. A recent emergence of understanding that NAD+ homeostasis is vulnerable to aging and disease processes has stimulated testing to determine if replenishment or augmentation of cellular or tissue NAD+ can have ameliorative effects on aging or disease phenotypes. This experimental approach has provided several proofs of concept successes demonstrating that replenishment or augmentation of NAD+ concentrations can provide ameliorative or curative benefits. Thus NAD+ metabolic pathways can provide key biomarkers and parameters for assessing and modulating organism health.
Co-reporter:Brett Langley;Anthony Sauve
Neurotherapeutics 2013 Volume 10( Issue 4) pp:605-620
Publication Date(Web):2013 October
DOI:10.1007/s13311-013-0214-5
Sirtuins are a conserved family of deacetylases whose activities are dependent on nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+). Sirtuins act in different cellular compartments, such as the nucleus where they deacetylate histones and transcriptional factors, in the cytoplasm where they modulate cytoskeletal and signaling molecules, and in the mitochondria where they engage components of the metabolic machinery. Collectively, they tune metabolic processes to energy availability, and modulate stress responses, protein aggregation, inflammatory processes, and genome stability. As such, they have garnered much interest and have been widely studied in aging and age-related neurodegeneration. In this chapter, we review the identification of sirtuins and their biological targets. We focus on their biological mechanisms of action and how they might be regulated, including via NAD metabolism, transcriptional and posttranscriptional control, and as targets of pharmacological agents. Lastly, we highlight the numerous studies suggesting that sirtuins are efficacious therapeutic targets in neurodegenerative disease and injury.
Co-reporter:Yana Cen, Jessica N. Falco, Ping Xu, Dou Yeon Youn and Anthony A. Sauve  
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2011 vol. 9(Issue 4) pp:987-993
Publication Date(Web):06 Dec 2010
DOI:10.1039/C0OB00774A
The ability to probe for catalytic activities of enzymes and to detect their abundance in complex biochemical contexts has traditionally relied on a combination of kinetic assays and techniques such as western blots that use expensive reagents such as antibodies. The ability to simultaneously detect activity and isolate a protein catalyst from a mixture is even more difficult and currently impossible in most cases. In this manuscript we describe a chemical approach that achieves this goal for a unique family of enzymes called sirtuins using novel chemical tools, enabling rapid detection of activity and isolation of these protein catalysts. Sirtuin deacetylases are implicated in the regulation of many physiological functions including energy metabolism, DNA-damage response, and cellular stress resistance. We synthesized an aminooxy-derivatized NAD+ and a pan-sirtuin inhibitor that reacts on sirtuin active sites to form a chemically stable complex that can subsequently be crosslinked to an aldehyde-substituted biotin. Subsequent retrieval of the biotinylated sirtuin complexes on streptavidin beads followed by gel electrophoresis enabled simultaneous detection of active sirtuins, isolation and molecular weight determination. We show that these tools are cross reactive against a variety of human sirtuin isoforms including SIRT1, SIRT2, SIRT3, SIRT5, SIRT6 and can react with microbial derived sirtuins as well. Finally, we demonstrate the ability to simultaneously detect multiple sirtuin isoforms in reaction mixtures with this methodology, establishing proof of concept tools for chemical studies of sirtuins in complex biological samples.
Co-reporter:Yana Cen
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2010 Volume 132(Issue 35) pp:12286-12298
Publication Date(Web):August 18, 2010
DOI:10.1021/ja910342d
Sirtuins are protein-modifying enzymes distributed throughout all forms of life. These enzymes bind NAD+, a universal metabolite, and react it with acetyllysine residues to effect deacetylation of protein side chains. This NAD+-dependent deacetylation reaction has been observed for sirtuin enzymes derived from archaeal, eubacterial, yeast, metazoan, and mammalian species, suggesting conserved chemical mechanisms for these enzymes. The first chemical step of deacetylation is the reaction of NAD+ with an acetyllysine residue which forms an enzyme-bound ADPR−peptidylimidate intermediate and nicotinamide. In this manuscript, the transition state for the ADP-ribosylation of acetyllysine is solved for an Archaeoglobus fulgidus sirtuin (Af2Sir2). Kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) were obtained by the competitive substrate method and were [1N-15N] = 1.024(2), [1′N-14C] = 1.014(4), [1′N-3H] = 1.300(3), [2′N-3H] = 1.099(5), [4′N-3H] = 0.997(2), [5′N-3H] = 1.020(5), [4′N-18O] = 0.984(5). KIEs were calculated for candidate transition state structures using computational methods (Gaussian 03 and ISOEFF 98) in order to match computed and experimentally determined KIEs to solve the transition state. The results indicate that the enzyme stabilizes a highly dissociated oxocarbenium ionlike transition state with very low bond orders to the leaving group nicotinamide and the nucleophile acetyllysine. A concerted yet highly asynchronous substitution mechanism forms the ADPR−peptidylimidate intermediate of the sirtuin deacetylation reaction.
Co-reporter:Jarrod B. French, Yana Cen, Tracy L. Vrablik, Ping Xu, Eleanor Allen, Wendy Hanna-Rose, and Anthony A. Sauve
Biochemistry 2010 Volume 49(Issue 49) pp:
Publication Date(Web):October 27, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bi1012518
Nicotinamidases are metabolic enzymes that hydrolyze nicotinamide to nicotinic acid. These enzymes are widely distributed across biology, with examples found encoded in the genomes of Mycobacteria, Archaea, Eubacteria, Protozoa, yeast, and invertebrates, but there are none found in mammals. Although recent structural work has improved our understanding of these enzymes, their catalytic mechanism is still not well understood. Recent data show that nicotinamidases are required for the growth and virulence of several pathogenic microbes. The enzymes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Drosophila melanogaster, and Caenorhabditis elegans regulate life span in their respective organisms, consistent with proposed roles in the regulation of NAD+ metabolism and organismal aging. In this work, the steady state kinetic parameters of nicotinamidase enzymes from C. elegans, Sa. cerevisiae, Streptococcus pneumoniae (a pathogen responsible for human pneumonia), Borrelia burgdorferi (the pathogen that causes Lyme disease), and Plasmodium falciparum (responsible for most human malaria) are reported. Nicotinamidases are generally efficient catalysts with steady state kcat values typically exceeding 1 s−1. The Km values for nicotinamide are low and in the range of 2 −110 μM. Nicotinaldehyde was determined to be a potent competitive inhibitor of these enzymes, binding in the low micromolar to low nanomolar range for all nicotinamidases tested. A variety of nicotinaldehyde derivatives were synthesized and evaluated as inhibitors in kinetic assays. Inhibitions are consistent with reaction of the universally conserved catalytic Cys on each enzyme with the aldehyde carbonyl carbon to form a thiohemiacetal complex that is stabilized by a conserved oxyanion hole. The S. pneumoniae nicotinamidase can catalyze exchange of 18O into the carboxy oxygens of nicotinic acid with H218O. The collected data, along with kinetic analysis of several mutants, allowed us to propose a catalytic mechanism that explains nicotinamidase and nicotinic acid 18O exchange chemistry for the S. pneumoniae enzyme involving key catalytic residues, a catalytic transition metal ion, and the intermediacy of a thioester intermediate.
Co-reporter:Yana Cen and Anthony A. Sauve
The Journal of Organic Chemistry 2009 Volume 74(Issue 16) pp:5779-5789
Publication Date(Web):July 7, 2009
DOI:10.1021/jo900637f
Methods to construct 2′-deoxy-2′-fluoro nucleosides have undergone limited improvement in the last 20 years in spite of the substantially increased value of these compounds as pharmaceuticals and as tools for studying biological processes. We herein describe a consolidated approach to synthesize precursors to these commercially and scientifically valuable compounds via diastereocontrolled fluorination of the readily available precursor 2-deoxy-d-ribonolactone. With employment of appropriate sterically bulky silyl protecting groups at the 3 and 5 positions, controlled electrophilic fluorination of the Li−ribonolactone enolate by N-fluorodibenzenesulfonamide yielded the corresponding 2-deoxy-2-fluoroarabinolactone in high isolated yield (72%). The protected 2-deoxy-2,2-difluororibonolactone was obtained similarly in high yield from a second round of electrophilic fluorination (two steps, 51% from protected ribonolactone starting material). Accomplishment of the difficult ribofluorination of the lactone was achieved by the directive effects of a diastereoselectively installed α-trimethylsilyl group. Electrophilic fluorination of a protected 2-deoxy-2-trimethylsilylarabinolactone via enolate generation provided the protected 2-deoxy-2-fluororibolactone as the exclusive fluorinated product. The reaction also yielded the starting material, the desilylated protected 2-deoxyribonolactone, which was recycled to provide a 38% chemical yield of the fluorinated product (versus initial protected ribonolactone) after consecutive silylation and fluorination cycles. Using our fluorinated sugar precursors, we prepared the 2′-fluoroarabino-, 2′-fluororibo-, and 2′,2′-difluoronicotinamide adenine dinucleotides (NAD+) of potential biological interest. These syntheses provide the most consolidated and efficient methods for production of sugar precursors of 2′-deoxy-2′-fluoronucleosides and have the advantage of utilizing an air-stable electrophilic fluorinating agent. The fluorinated NAD+s are anticipated to be useful for studying a variety of cellular metabolic and signaling processes.
Co-reporter:Jarrod B. French, Yana Cen and Anthony A. Sauve
Biochemistry 2008 Volume 47(Issue 38) pp:
Publication Date(Web):August 26, 2008
DOI:10.1021/bi800767t
Sirtuins are NAD+-dependent enzymes that deacetylate a variety of cellular proteins and in some cases catalyze protein ADP-ribosyl transfer. The catalytic mechanism of deacetylation is proposed to involve an ADPR-peptidylimidate, whereas the mechanism of ADP-ribosyl transfer to proteins is undetermined. Herein we characterize a Plasmodium falciparum sirtuin that catalyzes deacetylation of histone peptide sequences. Interestingly, the enzyme can also hydrolyze NAD+. Two mechanisms of hydrolysis were identified and characterized. One is independent of acetyllysine substrate and produces α-stereochemistry as established by reaction of methanol which forms α-1-O-methyl-ADPR. This reaction is insensitive to nicotinamide inhibition. The second solvolytic mechanism is dependent on acetylated peptide and is proposed to involve the imidate to generate β-stereochemistry. Stereochemistry was established by isolation of β-1-O-methyl-ADPR when methanol was added as a cosolvent. This solvolytic reaction was inhibited by nicotinamide, suggesting that nicotinamide and solvent compete for the imidate. These findings establish new reactions of wildtype sirtuins and suggest possible mechanisms for ADP-ribosylation to proteins. These findings also illustrate the potential utility of nicotinamide as a probe for mechanisms of sirtuin-catalyzed ADP-ribosyl transfer.
Co-reporter:Tianle Yang ; Noel Yan-Ki Chan
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2007 Volume 50(Issue 26) pp:6458-6461
Publication Date(Web):December 6, 2007
DOI:10.1021/jm701001c
A new two-step methodology achieves stereoselective synthesis of β-nicotinamide riboside and a series of related amide, ester, and acid nucleosides. Compounds were prepared through a triacetylated-nicotinate ester nucleoside, via coupling of either ethylnicotinate or phenylnicotinate with 1,2,3,5-tetra-O-acetyl-β-d-ribofuranose. Nicotinamide riboside, nicotinic acid riboside, O-ethylnicotinate riboside, O-methylnicotinate riboside, and several N-alkyl derivatives increased NAD+ concentrations from 1.2–2.7-fold in several mammalian cell lines. These findings establish bioavailability and potent effects of these nucleosides in stimulating the increase of NAD+ concentrations in mammalian cells.
Co-reporter:Ping Xu, Anthony A. Sauve
Mechanisms of Ageing and Development (April 2010) Volume 131(Issue 4) pp:287-298
Publication Date(Web):1 April 2010
DOI:10.1016/j.mad.2010.03.006
Organism aging is a process of time and maturation culminating in senescence and death. The molecular details that define and determine aging have been intensely investigated. It has become appreciated that the process is partly an accumulation of random yet inevitable changes, but it can be strongly affected by genes that alter lifespan. In this review, we consider how NAD+ metabolism plays important roles in the random patterns of aging, and also in the more programmatic aspects. The derivatives of NAD+, such as reduced and oxidized forms of NAD(P)+, play important roles in maintaining and regulating cellular redox state, Ca2+ stores, DNA damage and repair, stress responses, cell cycle timing and lipid and energy metabolism. NAD+ is also a substrate for signaling enzymes like the sirtuins and poly-ADP-ribosylpolymerases, members of a broad family of protein deacetylases and ADP-ribosyltransferases that regulate fundamental cellular processes such as transcription, recombination, cell division, proliferation, genome maintenance, apoptosis, stress resistance and senescence. NAD+-dependent enzymes are increasingly appreciated to regulate the timing of changes that lead to aging phenotypes. We consider how metabolism, specifically connected with Vitamin B3 and the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotides and their derivatives, occupies a central place in the aging processes of mammals.
Co-reporter:Anthony A. Sauve
Trends in Endocrinology & Metabolism (April 2007) Volume 18(Issue 3) pp:93
Publication Date(Web):1 April 2007
DOI:10.1016/j.tem.2007.02.007
Co-reporter:Anthony A. Sauve
Structure (10 September 2008) Volume 16(Issue 9) pp:1289-1292
Publication Date(Web):10 September 2008
DOI:10.1016/j.str.2008.08.004
In this issue, Hawse et al. (2008) provide additional insight into the mechanistic properties of sirtuin enzymes by describing the structure of a thio-imidate in the active site of Thermatoga maritima Sir2, which strengthens the proposal that the enzyme directly couples NAD+ and acetyllysine oxygen to form a versatile ADPR-peptidyl-imidate intermediate.
Co-reporter:Yana Cen, Jessica N. Falco, Ping Xu, Dou Yeon Youn and Anthony A. Sauve
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2011 - vol. 9(Issue 4) pp:NaN993-993
Publication Date(Web):2010/12/06
DOI:10.1039/C0OB00774A
The ability to probe for catalytic activities of enzymes and to detect their abundance in complex biochemical contexts has traditionally relied on a combination of kinetic assays and techniques such as western blots that use expensive reagents such as antibodies. The ability to simultaneously detect activity and isolate a protein catalyst from a mixture is even more difficult and currently impossible in most cases. In this manuscript we describe a chemical approach that achieves this goal for a unique family of enzymes called sirtuins using novel chemical tools, enabling rapid detection of activity and isolation of these protein catalysts. Sirtuin deacetylases are implicated in the regulation of many physiological functions including energy metabolism, DNA-damage response, and cellular stress resistance. We synthesized an aminooxy-derivatized NAD+ and a pan-sirtuin inhibitor that reacts on sirtuin active sites to form a chemically stable complex that can subsequently be crosslinked to an aldehyde-substituted biotin. Subsequent retrieval of the biotinylated sirtuin complexes on streptavidin beads followed by gel electrophoresis enabled simultaneous detection of active sirtuins, isolation and molecular weight determination. We show that these tools are cross reactive against a variety of human sirtuin isoforms including SIRT1, SIRT2, SIRT3, SIRT5, SIRT6 and can react with microbial derived sirtuins as well. Finally, we demonstrate the ability to simultaneously detect multiple sirtuin isoforms in reaction mixtures with this methodology, establishing proof of concept tools for chemical studies of sirtuins in complex biological samples.
N\',N\'\'-diacetylspermine
Nicotinamide Ribose