Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.488, No.4, 603-608, 2017
Sirtuin inhibition leads to autophagy and apoptosis in porcine preimplantation blastocysts
Sirtuins are nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide dependent class HI histone deacetylase proteins that play a crucial role in several cellular processes, including DNA repair, apoptosis, and lifespan. Previous studies have shown that sirtuin inhibition leads to embryonic developmental arrest and oxidative stress in porcine and murine. However, sirtuin-mediated mechanisms have not been examined in porcine pre implantation blastocysts. We therefore investigated the relationship between sirtuins and autophagy. Embryos were cultured with 100 NI sirtinol (SIRT1/2 inhibitor) in NCSU-23 media after in vitro fertilization. Treatment with sirtinol significantly reduced the rates of morula (21.34 +/- 1.84 vs. 11.89 +/- 2.01), blastocyst development (17.18 +/- 1.81 vs. 9.004 +/- 2.02), and total cell number (50.80 +/- 1.47 vs. 37.71 +/- 1.79), compared to controls, with an associating decrease the levels of Sirt2 transcript. Sirtinol treatment induced autophagy through an increase in LC3 transcript and LC3 protein. BECLIN1 and ATG5 expression showed a slight increase in treated group. Finally, treatment with sirtinol dramatically increased TUNEL indices (6.55 +/- 0.84 vs. 11.44 +/- 0.81) and fragmentation indices (0.33 +/- 0.05 vs. 1.40 +/- 0.30). BCL2L1 expression was lower, while Caspase-3 expression was significantly elevated in the sirtinol-treated group. Therefore, these findings suggest that sirtuins may elicit their effects through modifying autophagy and apoptosis, leading to developmental arrest and reducing the quality of porcine preimplantation embryos. (C) 2017 Published by Elsevier Inc.