Sirtuin-activating compound


Sirtuin-activating compounds are chemical compounds having an effect on sirtuins, a group of enzymes that use NAD+ to remove acetyl groups from proteins. They are caloric restriction mimetic compounds that may be helpful in treating various aging-related diseases.

Context

is recognized as the leading proponent of the hypothesis that caloric restriction slows aging by activation of Sirtuins.
STACs have been discovered by Konrad Howitz of Biomol Inc and biologist David Sinclair. In September 2003, Howitz and Sinclair et al. published a highly cited paper reporting that polyphenols such as resveratrol activate human SIRT1 and extend the lifespan of budding yeast. Other examples of such products are butein, piceatannol, isoliquiritigenin, fisetin, and quercetin.
Some STACs can cause artificial effects in the assay initially used for their identification, but it has been shown that STACs also activate SIRT1 against regular polypeptide substrates, with an influence of the substrate sequence.
Sirtris Pharmaceuticals, Sinclair's company, was purchased by GlaxoSmithKline in 2008, and subsequently shut down as a separate entity within GSK.