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  4. Circadian and Feeding Rhythms Orchestrate the Diurnal Liver Acetylome
 
research article

Circadian and Feeding Rhythms Orchestrate the Diurnal Liver Acetylome

Mauvoisin, Daniel
•
Atger, Florian
•
Dayon, Loic
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2017
Cell Reports

Lysine acetylation is involved in various biological processes and is considered a key reversible post-translational modification in the regulation of gene expression, enzyme activity, and subcellular localization. This post-translational modification is therefore highly relevant in the context of circadian biology, but its characterization on the proteome-wide scale and its circadian clock dependence are still poorly described. Here, we provide a comprehensive and rhythmic acetylome map of the mouse liver. Rhythmic acetylated proteins showed subcellular localization-specific phases that correlated with the related metabolites in the regulated pathways. Mitochondrial proteins were over-represented among the rhythmically acetylated proteins and were highly correlated with SIRT3-dependent deacetylation. SIRT3 activity being nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)(+) level-dependent, we show that NAD(+) is orchestrated by both feeding rhythms and the circadian clock through the NAD(+) salvage pathway but also via the nicotinamide riboside pathway. Hence, the diurnal acetylome relies on a functional circadian clock and affects important diurnal metabolic pathways in the mouse liver.

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article-S2211124717310586.pd.pdf

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http://purl.org/coar/version/c_970fb48d4fbd8a85

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CC BY-NC-ND

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