SIRT1 mediates obesity- and nutrient-dependent perturbation of pubertal timing by epigenetically controlling Kiss1 expression.
M J VazquezCarlos A ToroJ M CastellanoF Ruiz-PinoJ RoaD BeiroaV HerasI VelascoC DieguezL PinillaF GaytanRuben NogueirasM A BoschO K RønnekleivAlejandro LomnicziS R OjedaManuel Tena-SemperePublished in: Nature communications (2018)
Puberty is regulated by epigenetic mechanisms and is highly sensitive to metabolic and nutritional cues. However, the epigenetic pathways mediating the effects of nutrition and obesity on pubertal timing are unknown. Here, we identify Sirtuin 1 (SIRT1), a fuel-sensing deacetylase, as a molecule that restrains female puberty via epigenetic repression of the puberty-activating gene, Kiss1. SIRT1 is expressed in hypothalamic Kiss1 neurons and suppresses Kiss1 expression. SIRT1 interacts with the Polycomb silencing complex to decrease Kiss1 promoter activity. As puberty approaches, SIRT1 is evicted from the Kiss1 promoter facilitating a repressive-to-permissive switch in chromatin landscape. Early-onset overnutrition accelerates these changes, enhances Kiss1 expression and advances puberty. In contrast, undernutrition raises SIRT1 levels, protracts Kiss1 repression and delays puberty. This delay is mimicked by central pharmacological activation of SIRT1 or SIRT1 overexpression, achieved via transgenesis or virogenetic targeting to the ARC. Our results identify SIRT1-mediated inhibition of Kiss1 as key epigenetic mechanism by which nutritional cues and obesity influence mammalian puberty.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- dna methylation
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- gene expression
- early onset
- poor prognosis
- metabolic syndrome
- insulin resistance
- type diabetes
- transcription factor
- weight loss
- weight gain
- genome wide
- cell proliferation
- binding protein
- dna damage
- high fat diet induced
- signaling pathway
- body mass index
- magnetic resonance
- adipose tissue
- spinal cord
- mass spectrometry
- spinal cord injury
- copy number
- simultaneous determination
- cancer therapy
- solid phase extraction