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result(s) for
"Proteostasis - genetics"
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Expression of Mutant Ubiquitin and Proteostasis Impairment in Kii Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/Parkinsonism-Dementia Complex Brains
by
Kuzuhara, Shigeki
,
van Leeuwen, Fred W
,
Morimoto, Satoru
in
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
,
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis - genetics
,
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis - metabolism
2020
Abstract
Kii amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/parkinsonism-dementia complex (ALS/PDC) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that is endemic to the Kii peninsula of Japan. The disorder is clinically characterized by a variable combination of parkinsonism, dementia, and motor neuron symptoms. Despite extensive investigations, the etiology and pathogenesis of ALS/PDC remain unclear. At the neuropathological level, Kii ALS/PDC is characterized by neuronal loss and tau-dominant polyproteinopathy. Here, we report the accumulation of several proteins involved in protein homeostasis pathways, that is, the ubiquitin-proteasome system and the autophagy-lysosome pathway, in postmortem brain tissue from a number of Kii ALS/PDC cases (n = 4). Of particular interest is the presence of a mutant ubiquitin protein (UBB+1), which is indicative of disrupted ubiquitin homeostasis. The findings suggest that abnormal protein aggregation is linked to impaired protein homeostasis pathways in Kii ALS/PDC.
Journal Article
Distinct patterns of proteostasis network gene expression are associated with different prognoses in melanoma patients
by
Wellman, Rachel
,
Jacobson, Daniel
,
Labbadia, John
in
631/553
,
631/553/2711
,
Adenosine Triphosphate - metabolism
2024
The proteostasis network (PN) is a collection of protein folding and degradation pathways that spans cellular compartments and acts to preserve the integrity of the proteome. The differential expression of PN genes is a hallmark of many cancers, and the inhibition of protein quality control factors is an effective way to slow cancer cell growth. However, little is known about how the expression of PN genes differs between patients and how this impacts survival outcomes. To address this, we applied unbiased hierarchical clustering to gene expression data obtained from primary and metastatic cutaneous melanoma (CM) samples and found that two distinct groups of individuals emerge across each sample type. These patient groups are distinguished by the differential expression of genes encoding ATP-dependent and ATP-independent chaperones, and proteasomal subunits. Differences in PN gene expression were associated with increased levels of the transcription factors,
MEF2A, SP4, ZFX, CREB1 and ATF2,
as well as markedly different survival outcomes. However, surprisingly, similar PN alterations in primary and metastatic samples were associated with discordant survival outcomes in patients. Our findings reveal that the expression of PN genes demarcates CM patients and highlights several new proteostasis sub-networks that could be targeted for more effective suppression of CM within specific individuals.
Journal Article
Navigating the landscape of protein folding and proteostasis: from molecular chaperones to therapeutic innovations
by
Kuzu, Omer Faruk
,
Saatcioglu, Fahri
,
Granerud, Lars Jørgen Tvenge
in
631/154/555
,
631/378/340
,
631/67/1059
2025
Protein folding is a fundamental process ensuring that polypeptide chains acquire the correct three-dimensional structures required for biological function. This complex journey from nascent polypeptides to mature proteins is tightly regulated by the cellular proteostasis network—an integrated system of molecular chaperones, folding enzymes, and degradation machineries. Disruptions in this network lead to dysproteostasis, a pathological state implicated in a growing list of human diseases, including neurodegenerative disorders, metabolic syndromes, and cancer. In this review, we provide a comprehensive and multidimensional analysis of protein folding biology, tracing its evolution from early theoretical foundations to cutting-edge biophysical and computational techniques that now permit near-atomic-resolution modeling of folding dynamics. We explore the historical progression of protein folding research, including landmark discoveries of secondary structure, chaperone biology, and energy landscape theory. We detail the roles of key molecular chaperones across cytosolic, mitochondrial, and endoplasmic reticulum compartments, emphasizing their collaborative actions in protein folding and quality control. We also discuss the multifactorial causes of protein misfolding—from genetic mutations to aging and oxidative stress—and examine the pathological consequences, paying special attention to diseases characterized by toxic protein aggregation and loss of proteome fidelity. We then examine therapeutic innovations targeting proteostasis, including chaperone modulators, proteostasis pathway inhibitors, and emerging strategies to increase proteome resilience. By consolidating insights at the molecular, cellular, and systems levels, this review underscores the central role of protein folding homeostasis in health and disease and highlights novel opportunities for therapeutic intervention through the modulation of the proteostasis network.
Journal Article
Unexplained death in patients with NGLY1 mutations may be explained by adrenal insufficiency
by
Keulen, Britt J.
,
Finken, Martijn J. J.
,
Rotteveel, Joost
in
Adrenal insufficiency
,
Adrenal Insufficiency - diagnosis
,
Adrenal Insufficiency - enzymology
2019
Homozygous mutations in NGLY1 were recently found to cause a condition characterized by a complex neurological syndrome, hypo‐ or alacrimia, and elevated liver transaminases. For yet unknown reasons, mortality is increased in patients with this condition. NGLY1 encodes the cytosolic enzyme N‐glycanase 1, which is responsible for the deglycosylation of misfolded N‐glycosylated proteins. Disruption of this process is hypothesized to lead to an accumulation of misfolded proteins in the cytosol. Here, we describe the disease course of a girl with a homozygous mutation in NGLY1, namely c.1837del (p.Gln613 fs). In addition to the previously described symptoms, at the age of 8 she presented with recurrent infections and hyperpigmentation, and, subsequently, a diagnosis of primary adrenal insufficiency was made. There are no previous reports describing adrenal insufficiency in such patients. We postulate that patients with NGLY1 deficiency may develop adrenal insufficiency as a consequence of impaired proteostasis, and the accompanying proteotoxic stress‐induced cell death, through defective Nrf1 function. We recommend an annual evaluation of adrenal function in all patients with NGLY1 mutations in order to prevent unnecessary deaths. Homozygous mutations in NGLY1 were recently found to cause a condition characterized by a complex neurological syndrome, hypo‐ or alacrimia, and elevated liver transaminases. For yet unknown reasons, mortality is increased in patients with this condition. We postulate that patients with NGLY1 mutations may develop adrenal insufficiency as a result of proteotoxic stress‐induced cell death, which could be an explanation for this increased mortality.
Journal Article
Measuring biological aging in humans: A quest
by
Tanaka, Toshiko
,
Sierra, Felipe
,
Salimi, Shabnam
in
Aging
,
Aging - genetics
,
Aging - metabolism
2020
The global population of individuals over the age of 65 is growing at an unprecedented rate and is expected to reach 1.6 billion by 2050. Most older individuals are affected by multiple chronic diseases, leading to complex drug treatments and increased risk of physical and cognitive disability. Improving or preserving the health and quality of life of these individuals is challenging due to a lack of well‐established clinical guidelines. Physicians are often forced to engage in cycles of “trial and error” that are centered on palliative treatment of symptoms rather than the root cause, often resulting in dubious outcomes. Recently, geroscience challenged this view, proposing that the underlying biological mechanisms of aging are central to the global increase in susceptibility to disease and disability that occurs with aging. In fact, strong correlations have recently been revealed between health dimensions and phenotypes that are typical of aging, especially with autophagy, mitochondrial function, cellular senescence, and DNA methylation. Current research focuses on measuring the pace of aging to identify individuals who are “aging faster” to test and develop interventions that could prevent or delay the progression of multimorbidity and disability with aging. Understanding how the underlying biological mechanisms of aging connect to and impact longitudinal changes in health trajectories offers a unique opportunity to identify resilience mechanisms, their dynamic changes, and their impact on stress responses. Harnessing how to evoke and control resilience mechanisms in individuals with successful aging could lead to writing a new chapter in human medicine. Finding a reference metric for the rate of biological aging is key to understanding the molecular nature of the aging process. Defining and validating this metric in humans opens the door to a new kind of medicine that will overcome the limitation of current disease definitions. We will then be able to approach health in a global perspective and bring life course preventative measures to the center of attention.
Journal Article
FOXO3 directly regulates an autophagy network to functionally regulate proteostasis in adult neural stem cells
by
Hassell, Lexi-Amber
,
Audesse, Amanda J.
,
Webb, Ashley E.
in
Adult Stem Cells - cytology
,
Adult Stem Cells - metabolism
,
Aging
2019
Maintenance of a healthy proteome is essential for cellular homeostasis and loss of proteostasis is associated with tissue dysfunction and neurodegenerative disease. The mechanisms that support proteostasis in healthy cells and how they become defective during aging or in disease states are not fully understood. Here, we investigate the transcriptional programs that are essential for neural stem and progenitor cell (NSPC) function and uncover a program of autophagy genes under the control of the transcription factor FOXO3. Using genomic approaches, we observe that FOXO3 directly binds a network of target genes in adult NSPCs that are involved in autophagy, and find that FOXO3 functionally regulates induction of autophagy in these cells. Interestingly, in the absence of FOXO activity, aggregates accumulate in NSPCs, and this effect is reversed by TOR (target of rapamycin) inhibition. Surprisingly, enhancing FOXO3 causes nucleation of protein aggregates, but does not increase their degradation. The work presented here identifies a genomic network under the direct control of a key transcriptional regulator of aging that is critical for maintaining a healthy mammalian stem cell pool to support lifelong neurogenesis.
Journal Article
Reactive astrocytes acquire neuroprotective as well as deleterious signatures in response to Tau and Aß pathology
2022
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) alters astrocytes, but the effect of Aß and Tau pathology is poorly understood. TRAP-seq translatome analysis of astrocytes in APP/PS1 ß-amyloidopathy and MAPT
P301S
tauopathy mice revealed that only Aß influenced expression of AD risk genes, but both pathologies precociously induced age-dependent changes, and had distinct but overlapping signatures found in human post-mortem AD astrocytes. Both Aß and Tau pathology induced an astrocyte signature involving repression of bioenergetic and translation machinery, and induction of inflammation pathways plus protein degradation/proteostasis genes, the latter enriched in targets of inflammatory mediator Spi1 and stress-activated cytoprotective Nrf2. Astrocyte-specific Nrf2 expression induced a reactive phenotype which recapitulated elements of this proteostasis signature, reduced Aß deposition and phospho-tau accumulation in their respective models, and rescued brain-wide transcriptional deregulation, cellular pathology, neurodegeneration and behavioural/cognitive deficits. Thus, Aß and Tau induce overlapping astrocyte profiles associated with both deleterious and adaptive-protective signals, the latter of which can slow patho-progression.
Alzheimer’s disease is associated with changes in astrocytes. Here the authors investigated the astrocyte translatome associated with amyloid-ß and tau pathology.
Journal Article
Maternal immune activation in mice disrupts proteostasis in the fetal brain
2021
Maternal infection and inflammation during pregnancy are associated with neurodevelopmental disorders in offspring, but little is understood about the molecular mechanisms underlying this epidemiologic phenomenon. Here, we leveraged single-cell RNA sequencing to profile transcriptional changes in the mouse fetal brain in response to maternal immune activation (MIA) and identified perturbations in cellular pathways associated with mRNA translation, ribosome biogenesis and stress signaling. We found that MIA activates the integrated stress response (ISR) in male, but not female, MIA offspring in an interleukin-17a-dependent manner, which reduced global mRNA translation and altered nascent proteome synthesis. Moreover, blockade of ISR activation prevented the behavioral abnormalities as well as increased cortical neural activity in MIA male offspring. Our data suggest that sex-specific activation of the ISR leads to maternal inflammation-associated neurodevelopmental disorders.
This paper shows that maternal immune activation in mice induces changes in the mRNA translation machinery in the fetal brain and activates the integrated stress response in male fetuses, which mediates neurobehavioral abnormalities.
Journal Article
Impaired PSII Proteostasis Promotes Retrograde Signaling via Salicylic Acid
by
Macho, Alberto P.
,
Dogra, Vivek
,
Zhang, Siyuan
in
Arabidopsis - metabolism
,
Arabidopsis Proteins - metabolism
,
Chloroplasts - metabolism
2019
Photodamage of the PSII reaction center (RC) is an inevitable process in an oxygen-rich environment. The damaged PSII RC proteins (Dam-PSII) undergo degradation via the thylakoid membrane-bound FtsH metalloprotease, followed by posttranslational assembly of PSII. While the effect of Dam-PSII on gene regulation is described for cyanobacteria, its role in land plants is largely unknown. In this study, we reveal an intriguing retrograde signaling pathway by using the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) yellow variegated2-9 mutant, which expresses a mutated FtsH2 (FtsH2G267D) metalloprotease, specifically impairing its substrate-unfolding activity. This lesion leads to the perturbation of PSII protein homeostasis (proteostasis) and the accumulation of Dam-PSII. Subsequently, this results in an up-regulation of salicylic acid (SA)-responsive genes, which is abrogated by inactivation of either an SA transporter in the chloroplast envelope membrane or extraplastidic SA signaling components as well as by removal of SA. These results suggest that the stress hormone SA, which is mainly synthesized via the chloroplast isochorismate pathway in response to the impaired PSII proteostasis, mediates the retrograde signaling. These findings reinforce the emerging view of chloroplast function toward plant stress responses and suggest SA as a potential plastid factor mediating retrograde signaling.
Journal Article
Enzymes degraded under high light maintain proteostasis by transcriptional regulation in Arabidopsis
by
Duncan, Owen
,
Pogson, Barry J.
,
Millar, A. Harvey
in
Arabidopsis
,
Arabidopsis - enzymology
,
Arabidopsis - genetics
2022
Photoinhibitory high light stress in Arabidopsis leads to increases in markers of protein degradation and transcriptional up-regulation of proteases and proteolytic machinery, but proteostasis is largely maintained.We find significant increases in the in vivo degradation rate for specific molecular chaperones, nitrate reductase, glyceraldehyde-3 phosphate dehydrogenase, and phosphoglycerate kinase and other plastid, mitochondrial, peroxisomal, and cytosolic enzymes involved in redox shuttles. Coupled analysis of protein degradation rates, mRNA levels, and protein abundance reveal that 57% of the nuclear-encoded enzymes with higher degradation rates also had high light–induced transcriptional responses to maintain proteostasis. In contrast, plastid-encoded proteins with enhanced degradation rates showed decreased transcript abundances and must maintain protein abundance by other processes. This analysis reveals a light-induced transcriptional program for nuclear-encoded genes, beyond the regulation of the photosystem II (PSII) D1 subunit and the function of PSII, to replace key protein degradation targets in plants and ensure proteostasis under high light stress.
Journal Article