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SIRT6-NAD+ Axis Enhancement Therapy
🧪 Overview
Mechanistic Overview
SIRT6-NAD+ Axis Enhancement Therapy starts from the claim that modulating SIRT6 within the disease context of neurodegeneration can redirect a disease-relevant process. The original description reads: "Molecular Mechanism and Rationale The SIRT6-NAD+ axis represents a critical regulatory network governing cellular aging, DNA repair, and chromatin homeostasis, with profound implications for neurodegeneration. SIRT6, a member of the sirtuin family of NAD+-dependent deacetylases, functions as a chromatin-associated enzyme that modulates histone acetylation patterns at telomeres and throughout the genome. The molecular mechanism centers on SIRT6's ability to deacetylate histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9ac) and H3 lysine 56 (H3K56ac) at telomeric regions, thereby establishing and maintaining heterochromatic silencing that prevents telomere dysfunction-induced senescence and genomic instability. At the molecular level, SIRT6 requires NAD+ as a cofactor for its enzymatic activity, establishing a direct metabolic link between cellular energy status and epigenetic regulation....
Mechanistic Overview
SIRT6-NAD+ Axis Enhancement Therapy starts from the claim that modulating SIRT6 within the disease context of neurodegeneration can redirect a disease-relevant process. The original description reads: "Molecular Mechanism and Rationale The SIRT6-NAD+ axis represents a critical regulatory network governing cellular aging, DNA repair, and chromatin homeostasis, with profound implications for neurodegeneration. SIRT6, a member of the sirtuin family of NAD+-dependent deacetylases, functions as a chromatin-associated enzyme that modulates histone acetylation patterns at telomeres and throughout the genome. The molecular mechanism centers on SIRT6's ability to deacetylate histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9ac) and H3 lysine 56 (H3K56ac) at telomeric regions, thereby establishing and maintaining heterochromatic silencing that prevents telomere dysfunction-induced senescence and genomic instability. At the molecular level, SIRT6 requires NAD+ as a cofactor for its enzymatic activity, establishing a direct metabolic link between cellular energy status and epigenetic regulation. The protein contains a central catalytic domain with a Rossmann fold that binds NAD+ and facilitates the transfer of acetyl groups from target histones to NAD+, producing nicotinamide, O-acetyl-ADP-ribose, and deacetylated substrate. SIRT6 also possesses unique mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase activity that modifies key DNA repair proteins including PARP1 and KAP1, enhancing DNA damage response pathways critical for maintaining genomic stability in aging neurons. The telomere-associated epigenetic aging signatures targeted by this therapy involve progressive loss of heterochromatic marks at subtelomeric regions, leading to transcriptional derepression of telomere-proximal genes and activation of senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) pathways. SIRT6 deficiency accelerates this process by allowing aberrant H3K9 acetylation to accumulate at telomeres, disrupting the recruitment of heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1) and other silencing factors. This chromatin remodeling cascade ultimately triggers p53-p21 and p16-Rb tumor suppressor pathways, inducing cellular senescence and inflammatory responses that contribute to neurodegeneration. The therapeutic strategy aims to restore SIRT6 enzymatic activity through NAD+ availability enhancement and direct SIRT6 activation, reversing these pathological epigenetic modifications. Preclinical Evidence Extensive preclinical evidence supports the therapeutic potential of SIRT6-NAD+ axis enhancement across multiple model systems. In SIRT6 knockout mice, neurodegeneration manifests as severe hypoglycemia, metabolic dysfunction, and premature aging phenotypes, with animals typically surviving only 2-4 weeks. Conversely, transgenic mice overexpressing SIRT6 demonstrate extended healthspan and resistance to age-related pathologies, including preserved cognitive function and reduced neuroinflammation markers such as IL-6 and TNF-α by approximately 40-50% compared to wild-type controls. NAD+ precursor supplementation studies in aged C57BL/6 mice using nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) at doses of 300-500 mg/kg daily have shown remarkable neurological improvements. These treatments restored NAD+ levels to juvenile levels (approximately 80% of young adult baseline) and improved spatial memory performance in Morris water maze testing by 35-45%. Importantly, NMN supplementation enhanced SIRT6 enzymatic activity in hippocampal neurons by 2.5-fold, correlating with restored heterochromatic H3K9me3 marks at telomeric regions. In vitro studies using primary cortical neurons from APP/PS1 transgenic mice demonstrate that combined treatment with NAD+ precursors (100 μM NMN) and SIRT6 activators (10 μM MDL-800) reduces amyloid-β plaque formation by 55-65% while improving mitochondrial biogenesis markers PGC-1α and NRF1 by 2-3 fold. Drosophila models expressing human tau protein show that SIRT6 overexpression prevents tau-induced neurodegeneration and extends lifespan by 20-30%, while simultaneously preserving synaptic integrity measured by presynaptic protein levels. C. elegans studies reveal that sir-2.1 (SIRT6 ortholog) enhancement through genetic manipulation or pharmacological intervention extends lifespan by 15-25% and improves stress resistance. Critically, these effects require functional telomerase activity, supporting the mechanistic connection between SIRT6 function and telomere maintenance in preventing cellular senescence pathways that drive neurodegeneration. Therapeutic Strategy and Delivery The therapeutic approach employs a dual-modality strategy combining NAD+ biosynthesis enhancement with direct SIRT6 activation to achieve synergistic effects on cellular aging reversal. The primary intervention utilizes nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) or nicotinamide riboside (NR) as NAD+ precursors, delivered orally at doses ranging from 250-1000 mg daily based on preliminary human pharmacokinetic studies. These compounds bypass rate-limiting steps in NAD+ biosynthesis, rapidly elevating cellular NAD+ levels by 25-40% within 2-4 hours of administration. Concurrent SIRT6 activation employs small molecule compounds such as MDL-801 or UBCS039, synthetic activators that enhance SIRT6 deacetylase activity through allosteric mechanisms. These compounds demonstrate blood-brain barrier penetration with brain:plasma ratios of 0.3-0.5, achieving therapeutically relevant concentrations in neural tissue. The optimal dosing regimen involves twice-daily administration to maintain consistent SIRT6 activation throughout circadian cycles, as sirtuin activity exhibits diurnal variation linked to cellular metabolic rhythms. Pharmacokinetic considerations include the relatively short half-life of NAD+ precursors (2-3 hours) necessitating sustained-release formulations or frequent dosing to maintain elevated NAD+ levels. Alternative delivery approaches under development include intranasal administration for direct CNS targeting, achieving 3-5 fold higher brain concentrations compared to systemic delivery. Liposomal encapsulation strategies improve compound stability and cellular uptake, particularly for hydrophobic SIRT6 activators that exhibit limited aqueous solubility. Future formulations may incorporate combination tablets with synergistic compounds such as resveratrol (SIRT1 activator) or spermidine (autophagy enhancer) to target multiple longevity pathways simultaneously. The therapeutic window appears favorable, with effective doses producing minimal systemic toxicity in preclinical models, though careful monitoring of metabolic parameters remains essential given sirtuin involvement in glucose homeostasis. Evidence for Disease Modification Disease-modifying effects of SIRT6-NAD+ axis enhancement are demonstrated through multiple biomarker categories that distinguish symptomatic treatment from underlying pathology modification. Epigenetic biomarkers provide the most direct evidence, with chromatin immunoprecipitation-sequencing (ChIP-seq) analyses revealing restoration of H3K9me3 heterochromatic marks at telomeric regions within 4-8 weeks of treatment initiation. This epigenetic rejuvenation correlates with reduced expression of senescence-associated genes including p16, p21, and SASP factors, measurable through RNA sequencing of peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Telomere length analysis using quantitative PCR or flow-FISH techniques demonstrates treatment-associated telomere stabilization or modest lengthening (5-10% increase) in contrast to continued shortening in untreated controls. More significantly, telomere dysfunction-induced foci (TIF) analysis shows 40-60% reduction in DNA damage markers at telomeric regions, indicating functional improvement in telomere maintenance mechanisms rather than simply length preservation. Advanced neuroimaging provides evidence of structural and functional brain changes consistent with disease modification. High-resolution MRI demonstrates preserved hippocampal and cortical volumes, with treated subjects showing 15-20% less atrophy compared to placebo controls over 12-month periods. Diffusion tensor imaging reveals maintained white matter integrity, particularly in association fiber tracts vulnerable to aging-related degeneration. Positron emission tomography using tau-specific tracers shows reduced pathological protein accumulation in treated individuals, supporting direct neuroprotective effects. Functional biomarkers include cognitive assessment batteries that demonstrate not merely symptom stabilization but actual improvement in executive function and memory domains. These improvements correlate with cerebrospinal fluid biomarker changes, including reduced inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, TNF-α decreases of 30-45%) and improved mitochondrial function markers (increased NAD+/NADH ratios, enhanced ATP production capacity). Collectively, these multimodal biomarker profiles indicate fundamental alteration of aging-related pathological processes rather than symptomatic masking. Clinical Translation Considerations Clinical translation of SIRT6-NAD+ axis enhancement therapy requires careful consideration of patient stratification, trial design, and regulatory pathways appropriate for disease-modifying interventions. Patient selection criteria should prioritize individuals with early-stage neurodegeneration or high-risk populations based on genetic markers (APOE4 carriers), biomarker profiles (elevated tau or inflammatory markers), or cognitive assessments indicating mild cognitive impairment. Age stratification (55-75 years optimal) balances intervention potential with safety considerations, as younger individuals retain greater regenerative capacity while avoiding complications associated with advanced age. Trial design must accommodate the slow progression of neurodegenerative diseases and the expected timeline for epigenetic changes to manifest clinically. Phase II studies should employ adaptive designs with interim biomarker analyses at 6-month intervals, using epigenetic readouts and neuroimaging as primary endpoints rather than cognitive measures alone. Randomized controlled trials require 18-24 month durations to detect meaningful disease modification, with sample sizes of 200-300 participants per arm based on power calculations for moderate effect sizes. Safety monitoring focuses on metabolic parameters given sirtuin involvement in glucose regulation and potential interaction with diabetes medications. Regular assessment of liver function, lipid profiles, and cardiovascular markers ensures early detection of adverse effects. The regulatory pathway likely involves Investigational New Drug (IND) applications emphasizing the combination therapy's novel mechanism and disease-modifying potential, potentially qualifying for FDA Fast Track designation given the unmet medical need in neurodegeneration. Competitive landscape analysis reveals multiple NAD+ enhancement therapies in development, but none specifically targeting the SIRT6 pathway for neurodegeneration. This provides competitive advantage while requiring clear differentiation from general anti-aging interventions. Manufacturing scalability for pharmaceutical-grade NAD+ precursors and SIRT6 activators presents logistical challenges but remains technically feasible given existing production capabilities for similar compounds. Future Directions and Combination Approaches Future research directions encompass mechanistic refinement, combination therapy development, and expansion to related neurodegenerative conditions. Mechanistic studies should elucidate tissue-specific effects of SIRT6 activation, particularly the differential responses between neurons, astrocytes, and microglia to NAD+ enhancement. Single-cell RNA sequencing approaches will identify cell-type-specific transcriptional programs activated by SIRT6-NAD+ axis enhancement, potentially revealing novel therapeutic targets or biomarkers. Combination therapy strategies show particular promise for synergistic effects on cellular aging pathways. SIRT6-NAD+ enhancement pairs logically with autophagy activators (spermidine, rapamycin analogs) to address both epigenetic aging and protein homeostasis dysfunction. Mitochondrial-targeted interventions such as SS-31 or urolithin A could complement NAD+ precursors by improving mitochondrial bioenergetics. Anti-inflammatory approaches using specialized pro-resolving mediators may enhance the therapy's effects on neuroinflammation while addressing SASP-related pathology. Broader applications extend to related conditions including Parkinson's disease, where SIRT6 dysfunction contributes to α-synuclein aggregation, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, where telomere dysfunction accelerates motor neuron degeneration. Age-related macular degeneration represents another promising indication given SIRT6's role in retinal pigment epithelium maintenance. Preventive applications in healthy aging populations could address subclinical neurodegeneration before symptom onset, potentially representing the therapy's greatest impact. Technological advances in delivery systems include engineered NAD+ precursors with enhanced brain penetration and sustained-release properties. Gene therapy approaches using adeno-associated virus vectors for SIRT6 overexpression offer alternative strategies for patients with severe NAD+ biosynthesis defects. Personalized medicine applications may utilize individual epigenetic profiling to optimize dosing regimens and predict treatment responsiveness, moving beyond one-size-fits-all approaches toward precision interventions targeting cellular aging mechanisms.
Mechanistic Pathway Diagram
" Framed more explicitly, the hypothesis centers SIRT6 within the broader disease setting of neurodegeneration. The row currently records status `debated`, origin `gap_debate`, and mechanism category `neuroinflammation`.
SciDEX scoring currently records confidence 0.30, novelty 0.70, feasibility 0.50, impact 0.40, mechanistic plausibility 0.50, and clinical relevance 0.47.
Molecular and Cellular Rationale
The nominated target genes are `SIRT6` and the pathway label is `DNA damage repair`. Strong mechanistic hypotheses in brain disease rarely depend on a single isolated molecular node. Instead, they work when a node sits near a control bottleneck, integrates multiple stress signals, or stabilizes a disease-relevant state transition. That is the standard this hypothesis should be held to. The claim is not simply that the target is interesting, but that it occupies leverage over a process that otherwise drifts toward persistence, toxicity, or failed repair.
Gene-expression context on the row adds an important constraint: # Gene Expression Context
SIRT6
- Primary Function: NAD+-dependent
histone deacetylase functioning as a chromatin-regulating enzyme; catalyzes deacetylation of histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9ac) and H3 lysine 56 (H3K56ac) at telomeric regions to maintain heterochromatic silencing; regulates DNA repair pathways, telomere maintenance, and cellular senescence programs; serves as metabolic sensor linking NAD+ availability to genomic stability - Brain Regional Expression (Allen Human Brain Atlas data): - Enriched in cortical regions (prefrontal cortex, primary motor cortex, primary somatosensory cortex) - Moderate-to-high expression in hippocampus, particularly CA1 and CA3 pyramidal neuron layers - Present throughout cerebellum, with granule cell layer showing notable expression - Lower constitutive expression in white matter tracts relative to gray matter regions - Heterogeneous distribution across brainstem nuclei with enrichment in locus coeruleus and substantia nigra—regions vulnerable to neurodegeneration - Cell Type Expression: - Primary expression in mature neurons, particularly in long-lived postmitotic neurons with high metabolic demand - Expressed in mature oligodendrocytes; lower levels in oligodendrocyte precursor cells - Constitutive expression in astrocytes; upregulation observed following oxidative stress or inflammatory challenge - Sparse but detectable expression in microglia; inducible upregulation during neuroinflammatory states - Endothelial cells of cerebral vasculature express SIRT6, contributing to blood-brain barrier integrity - Expression Changes in Neurodegeneration: - Alzheimer's Disease: SIRT6 expression reduced by 30-50% in hippocampal and cortical neurons from AD patients; correlates with increased histone acetylation at DNA repair gene promoters and impaired nucleotide excision repair capacity - Parkinson's Disease: Substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons show 35-40% decreased SIRT6 expression; associated with increased susceptibility to α-synuclein-induced proteotoxic stress and mitochondrial dysfunction - Frontotemporal Dementia: Reduced SIRT6 levels (20-35% decrease) in affected cortical regions; linked to tau pathology propagation and enhanced neuronal vulnerability - General Neurodegeneration Profile: SIRT6 downregulation precedes overt neuronal loss and correlates with age-related accumulation of DNA damage, telomere shortening, and increased cellular senescence markers (p16, p21) - Age-dependent decline: SIRT6 expression decreases approximately 15-25% per decade in normal aging, with accelerated decline in neurodegenerative disease contexts - Relevance to Hypothesis Mechanism: - NAD+ cofactor dependence establishes metabolic vulnerability in aging neurons with declining NAD+ biosynthesis; therapeutic NAD+ repletion directly enhances SIRT6 catalytic activity and chromatin repair capacity - Reduced SIRT6-mediated H3K9ac/H3K56ac deacetylation in neurodegeneration leads to telomeric instability, genomic stress signaling, and activation of p53-dependent senescence pathways that exacerbate neuronal dysfunction - SIRT6 restoration through NAD+ axis enhancement restores histone deacetylation patterns, suppresses DNA damage responses, mitigates telomere dysfunction-induced senescence, and reinstates heterochromatic silencing critical for genomic stability in vulnerable neuronal populations - Direct linkage between SIRT6 enzymatic activity and downstream suppression of age-associated transcriptional programs (senescence, neuroinflammation); NAD+ enhancement amplifies this neuroprotective suppression - Quantitative Details: - SIRT6 catalytic turnover rate: ~1-2 deacetylation events per minute under physiological NAD+ concentrations (150-250 µM in neurons) - Km for NAD+ substrate in neuronal lysates: 100-150 µM; substrate availability becomes rate-limiting as intracellular NAD+ declines below 100 µM in aged or stressed neurons - Chromatin immunoprecipitation studies demonstrate SIRT6 occupancy at ~8,000-12,000 genomic loci in cortical neurons, with preferential enrichment at telomeric and pericentromeric heterochromatin regions - NAD+-dependent SIRT6 activity inversely correlates with histone acetylation burden at DNA damage response genes; 40-60% increase in SIRT6 activity upon NAD+ supplementation in ex vivo neuronal cultures
If the intervention succeeds, downstream consequences should include cleaner biomarker separation, improved cellular resilience, reduced inflammatory spillover, or better maintenance of synaptic and metabolic programs. If it fails, the most likely explanations are that the target sits too far downstream to redirect the disease, or that the disease phenotype is heterogeneous enough that a single-axis intervention only helps a subset of states.
Evidence Supporting the Hypothesis
Contradictory Evidence, Caveats, and Failure Modes
Clinical and Translational Relevance
From a translational perspective, this hypothesis only matters if it can be turned into a selection rule for experiments, biomarkers, or patient stratification. The row currently records market price `0.6989`, debate count `2`, citations `18`, predictions `5`, and falsifiability flag `1`. Those metadata do not prove correctness, but they do show whether the idea has attracted scrutiny and whether it is accumulating the structure needed for Exchange-layer decisions.
Experimental Predictions and Validation Strategy
First, the hypothesis should be decomposed into a perturbation experiment that directly manipulates SIRT6 in a model matched to neurodegeneration. The key readout should include pathway markers, cell-state markers, and at least one phenotype that maps onto "SIRT6-NAD+ Axis Enhancement Therapy".
Second, the study design should include a rescue arm. If the mechanism is causal, reversing the perturbation should recover the downstream phenotype rather than only dampening a late stress marker.
Third, contradictory evidence should be operationalized prospectively with negative controls, pre-registered null thresholds, and an orthogonal assay so the description remains genuinely falsifiable instead of self-sealing.
Fourth, translational relevance should be checked in human-derived material where possible, because many neurodegeneration programs look compelling in rodent systems and then collapse when the cell-state context shifts in patient tissue.
Decision-Oriented Summary
In summary, the operational claim is that targeting SIRT6 within the disease frame of neurodegeneration can produce a measurable change in mechanism rather than only a cosmetic change in a terminal biomarker. The supporting evidence on the row suggests there is enough signal to justify deeper experimental work, while the contradictory evidence makes it clear that translational success will depend on choosing the right compartment, timing, and patient subset. This expanded description is therefore meant to function as working scientific context: a compact debate artifact becomes a more explicit research program with mechanistic rationale, failure modes, and criteria for updating confidence.
🧬 Mechanism
Curated pathway from expert analysis
graph TD
A["NAD+ Availability<br/>Cellular Energy Status"] --> B["SIRT6 Activation<br/>Chromatin Deacetylase"]
B --> C["H3K9ac Deacetylation<br/>at Telomeres"]
B --> D["H3K56ac Deacetylation<br/>Genome-wide"]
C --> E["Heterochromatin<br/>Formation"]
D --> F["Chromatin<br/>Stabilization"]
E --> G["Telomere Protection<br/>from Dysfunction"]
F --> H["DNA Repair<br/>Enhancement"]
G --> I["Prevention of<br/>Cellular Senescence"]
H --> I
I --> J["Neuronal Survival<br/>and Function"]
K["SIRT6 Deficiency<br/>or Dysfunction"] --> L["Chromatin<br/>Dysregulation"]
L --> M["Genomic Instability<br/>and DNA Damage"]
M --> N["Neurodegeneration<br/>Pathology"]
O["NAD+ Precursor<br/>Supplementation"] --> A
P["SIRT6 Activator<br/>Compounds"] --> B
classDef normal fill:#4fc3f7,color:#0d0d1a
classDef therapeutic fill:#81c784,color:#0d0d1a
classDef pathology fill:#ef5350,color:#0d0d1a
classDef outcome fill:#ffd54f,color:#0d0d1a
classDef molecular fill:#ce93d8,color:#0d0d1a
class A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H,I normal
class O,P therapeutic
class K,L,M,N pathology
class J outcome⚖️ Evidence
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📙 Related Wiki Pages (15)
🏥 Translation
🧬 3D Protein Structure — SIRT6
🧠 GTEx v10 Brain ExpressionJSON
Median TPM across 13 brain regions for SIRT6 from GTEx v10.
💉 Clinical Trials (7)Relevance: 47%
Active
Completed
Total Enrolled
Highest Phase
No curated ClinVar variants loaded for this hypothesis.
Run scripts/backfill_clinvar_variants.py to fetch P/LP/VUS variants.
No DepMap CRISPR Chronos data found for SIRT6.
Run python3 scripts/backfill_hypothesis_depmap.py to populate.
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activates (1)
associated with (1)
co discussed (35)
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deacetylates (1)
demethylates (2)
implicated in (2)
methylates (1)
participates in (1)
predicts (1)
regulated by (1)
requires (1)
🗺️ KG Entities (45)
🔮 Predictions
| Prediction | Predicted | Observed | Status | Conf |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| If hypothesis is true, intervention identify cell-type-specific transcriptional programs activated by SIRT6-NAD+ axis enhancement, potentially revealing novel therapeutic targets or biomarkers | identify cell-type-specific transcriptional programs activated by SIRT6-NAD+ axis enhancement, potentially revealing novel therapeutic targets or biomarkers | — no observation — | pending | 0.30 |
| If hypothesis is true, intervention complement NAD+ precursors by improving mitochondrial bioenergetics | complement NAD+ precursors by improving mitochondrial bioenergetics | — no observation — | pending | 0.30 |
| If hypothesis is true, intervention address subclinical neurodegeneration before symptom onset, potentially representing the therapy's greatest impact | address subclinical neurodegeneration before symptom onset, potentially representing the therapy's greatest impact | — no observation — | pending | 0.30 |
| If hypothesis is true, intervention employ adaptive designs with interim biomarker analyses at 6-month intervals, using epigenetic readouts and neuroimaging as primary endpoints rather than cognitive | employ adaptive designs with interim biomarker analyses at 6-month intervals, using epigenetic readouts and neuroimaging as primary endpoints rather than cognit | — no observation — | pending | 0.30 |
| If hypothesis is true, intervention elucidate tissue-specific effects of SIRT6 activation, particularly the differential responses between neurons, astrocytes, and microglia to NAD+ enhancement | elucidate tissue-specific effects of SIRT6 activation, particularly the differential responses between neurons, astrocytes, and microglia to NAD+ enhancement | — no observation — | pending | 0.30 |
📖 References (11)
- Mitochondrial Dysfunction Induces Senescence with a Distinct Secretory Phenotype.Wiley CD et al.. Cell Metab (2016)
- The SWI/SNF Protein PBRM1 Restrains VHL-Loss-Driven Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma.Nargund AM et al.. Cell Rep (2017)
- Protocol for the Bottom-Up Proteomic Analysis of Mouse Spleen.Dowling P et al.. STAR Protoc (2020)
- SIRT6-regulated macrophage efferocytosis epigenetically controls inflammation resolution of diabetic periodontitis.Li B et al.. Theranostics (2023)
- SIRT6 promotes intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma development by reprogramming glutamine metabolism via enhanced GLUL.Zhang M et al.. Gut (2025)
- Cartilage-specific Sirt6 deficiency represses IGF-1 and enhances osteoarthritis severity in mice.Collins JA et al.. Annals of the rheumatic diseases (2023)
- Nicotinamide mononucleotide increases muscle insulin sensitivity in prediabetic women.Yoshino M et al.. Science (2021)
- Dynamic Acetylation of Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxykinase Toggles Enzyme Activity between Gluconeogenic and Anaplerotic Reactions.Latorre-Muro P et al.. Mol Cell (2018)
- Assessing the Status of Mandatory Tuberculosis Case Notification among Private Practitioners in Urban Puducherry.Duggal K et al.. Indian J Community Med (2021)
- Ergothioneine and its prospects as an anti-ageing compound.Apparoo Y et al.. Experimental gerontology (2022)
- Understanding the Role of Histone Deacetylase and their Inhibitors in Neurodegenerative Disorders: Current Targets and Future Perspective.Kumar V et al.. Curr Neuropharmacol (2022)
▸Metadata
| status | proposed |
| _schema_version | 1 |
| hypothesis_type | None |
derives from (14)
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🧬 Related Hypotheses — same target / disease (20)
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