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Loss of hepatic Sirt7 accelerates diethylnitrosamine (DEN)-induced formation of hepatocellular carcinoma by impairing DNA damage repair

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Abstract
The mammalian sirtuin family (SIRT1-SIRT7) has shown diverse biological roles in the regulation and maintenance of genome stability under genotoxic stress. SIRT7, one of the least studied sirtuin, has been demonstrated to be a key factor for DNA damage response (DDR). However, conflicting results have proposed that Sirt7 is an oncogenic factor to promote transformation in cancer cells. To address this inconsistency, we investigated properties of SIRT7 in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) regulation under DNA damage and found that loss of hepatic Sirt7 accelerated HCC progression. Specifically, the number, size, and volume of hepatic tumor colonies in diethyl-nitrosamine (DEN) injected Sirt7-deficient liver were markedly enhanced. Further, levels of HCC progression markers and pro-inflammatory cytokines were significantly elevated in the absence of hepatic Sirt7, unlike those in the control. In chromatin, SIRT7 was stabilized and colocalized to damage site by inhibiting the induction of γH2AX under DNA damage. Together, our findings suggest that SIRT7 is a crucial factor for DNA damage repair and that hepatic loss-of-Sirt7 can promote genomic instability and accelerate HCC development, unlike early studies describing that Sirt7 is an oncogenic factor © 2024 by the The Korean Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. All Rights Reserved.
Author(s)
Kim, YunaKang, Baeki E.Gariani, KarimGariani, JoannaLee, JungueeKim, Hyun-JinLee, Chang-WooSchoonjans, KristinaAuwerx, JohanRyu, Dongryeol
Issued Date
2024-02
Type
Article
DOI
10.5483/BMBRep.2023-0187
URI
https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/9719
Publisher
The Biochemical Society of the Republic of Korea
Citation
BMB Reports, v.57, no.2, pp.98 - 103
ISSN
1976-6696
Appears in Collections:
Department of Biomedical Science and Engineering > 1. Journal Articles
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