Holiday book sale: Save up to 30% on print and eBooks. No promo code needed.
Save up to 30% on print and eBooks.
Introductory Review on Sirtuins in Biology, Aging, and Disease
1st Edition - April 20, 2018
Editors: Leonard Guarente, Raul Mostoslavsky, Aleksey Kazantsev
Paperback ISBN:9780128134993
9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 8 1 3 4 9 9 - 3
eBook ISBN:9780128135006
9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 8 1 3 5 0 0 - 6
Introductory Review on Sirtuins in Biology and Disease provides key insights for scientists and advanced students who need to understand sirtuins and the current research in this… Read more
Purchase options
LIMITED OFFER
Save 50% on book bundles
Immediately download your ebook while waiting for your print delivery. No promo code is needed.
Introductory Review on Sirtuins in Biology and Disease provides key insights for scientists and advanced students who need to understand sirtuins and the current research in this field. This book is ideal for pharmaceutical companies as they develop novel targets using sirtuins for metabolic diseases, cancer and neurodegenerative illnesses. Sirtuins are a diverse family of proteins, with several members in mammals. The functional diversity of sirtuins is rather broad, and they have been implicated in various central biological processes. Thus, they are also highly relevant in the context of various human diseases, from cancer to neurodegeneration.
Covers both the general and specific aspects of sirtuin proteins and their role in biology, aging and disease
Presents a top quality collection of leading experts who contribute on a wide range of sirtuin-related topics
Ideal resource for pharmaceutical companies as they develop novel targets using sirtuins for metabolic diseases, cancer and neurodegenerative illnesses
Biochemists and those who work in genetics, molecular biology, system biology, translational research and drug discovery
1. Early Sirtuin Research 1991-2000
2. Regulation of sirtuins by systemic NAD+ biosynthesis
3. NAD modulation - biology and therapy
4. The enzymatic activity of sirtuins
5. Molecular mechanisms of Sirtuin activation and inhibition
6. Pharmacological approaches for modulating sirtuins
7. Mitochondrial Sirtuins
8. Biological Roles and Activities for Mitochondrial Sirtuins
9. The multitasking roles of the mammalian deacetylase SIRT6
10. Chromatin and nuclear signaling: SIRT7 function in the nucleolus and beyond
11. Sirtiuns and Carcinogenesis
12. Roles for sirtuins in cardiovascular biology
13. Sirtuins in Brain Biology and Disease
No. of pages: 220
Language: English
Edition: 1
Published: April 20, 2018
Imprint: Academic Press
Paperback ISBN: 9780128134993
eBook ISBN: 9780128135006
LG
Leonard Guarente
American biologist best known for his research on life span extension in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, round worms (Caenorhabditis elegans), and mice. He is currently a Novartis Professor of Biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Based on the discovery that SIR2 is a key regulator of longevity in both yeast and worms, he is interested in determining whether this highly conserved gene also governs longevity in other organisms, including mammals.
In 1999, Guarente became co-founder of Elixir Pharmaceuticals, which aimed to develop drugs targeting sirtuin. Leonard Guarente wrote an autobiography in 2003 titled Ageless Quest: One Scientist's Search for Genes That Prolong Youth. He is founder of technology start-up Elysium Health.
Affiliations and expertise
Department of Biology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA
RM
Raul Mostoslavsky
Raul Mostoslavsky received his M.D. from the University of Tucuman in Argentina and his Ph.D. from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel. His longstanding interest in basic science and epigenetics brought him to Harvard Medical School to pursue postdoctoral studies where he first became interested in sirtuins. In 2007 Dr. Mostoslavsky opened his own lab at the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Harvard Medical School. He is currently the Laurel Schwartz Associate Professor of Oncology at the MGH Cancer Center, Harvard Medical School, the Kristin and Bob Higgins MGH Research Scholar, and an Associate Member of the Broad Institute.
His main research interests are on the crosstalk between epigenetics and metabolism, and the roles of chromatin sirtuins in health and disease, particularly cancer.
Affiliations and expertise
Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
AK
Aleksey Kazantsev
Aleksey Kazantsev received his bachelor's degree in biology and chemistry from Moscow Pedagogical University. As a graduate student he was enrolled in the Genetics, Molecular Biology and Biotechnology Program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and completed his PhD thesis in 1997.
Dr. Kazantsev then joined David Housman's laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he started work on cellular models of neurodegeneration. At MIT he developed a strong interest in drug discovery, and worked on the development of high-throughput drug screening assays. Through involvement in collaborative work with Genzyme Corporation, he became co-inventor on a few patent applications, disclosing novel neurodegenerative assays and therapeutic agents. He discovered an inhibitor of polyglutamine aggregation, which was neuroprotective in a Huntington’s disease mouse model, and published extensively in the field of Huntington’s disease and drug discovery.
In 2002 Dr. Kazantsev was named assistant professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School and principal investigator at Massachusetts General Hospital, where he continued to pursue his interest in drug discovery for neurodegenerative diseases, setting up a high-throughput drug screening facility and in collaboration with other investigators performing drug screens targeting various neurodegenerative disorders. Currently he is a co-PI on a collaborative research project with Novartis toward the development of a cure for Huntington’ s disease.
Affiliations and expertise
MassGeneral Institute for Neurodegenerative Disease, Charlestown, MA, USA