Silencing type information regulator homolog 1 (SIRT1) is a class of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) dependent deacetylases, which is the convergence point of important physiological processes in vivo, namely, osteoblast aging, energy metabolism, and bone remodeling. To verify whether the O-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) modification of SIRT1 in the nucleus of osteoblasts enhances its deacetylase activity under stress and protects osteoblasts through the RANK/RANKL signaling pathway by collagen deacetylation. The R language and online data research identified SIRT1 as being involved in bone metabolism. Enrichment analysis showed that SIRT1 is involved in osteoblast transcription, apoptosis, and deacetylation pathways. Interactive Immuno-blotting and immunofluorescence experiments revealed that SIRT1 and O-glycosylation catalytic enzyme (OGT) were localized in the nucleus. Mass Spectrometry analysis showed that O-glycosylation occurred on the asparagine at the 346th position of SIRT1, and N346 was located in the central domain of SIRT1. Furthermore, the protein structure analysis of PyMol also proved that the OGT binding region was in the central domain of SIRT1. Under physiological conditions, both wtSIRT1 and SIRT1 can inhibit RANKL-mediated transcriptional activation. The RT-PCR detection results showed that wtSIRT1 reduced RANKL transcription under the conditions of apoptotic agent treatment. The finding that SIRT1 can regulate the physiological process of bone remodeling through the RANK/RANKL signaling pathway in osteoblasts under stress. The O-glycosylation and deacetylation activity of SIRT1 significantly increased, regulating the balance between osteoblast survival and apoptosis by deacetylation of key proteins such as RANKL.Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.