4.7 Review

Regulation of Age-Related Protein Toxicity

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.637084

Keywords

protein homeostasis; protein quality control; aggregation; phase separation; amyloid; aging

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) [281622 PDControl]
  2. Aspasia fellowship from NWO [015.014.005]
  3. Alumni chapter Gooische Groningers

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Proteome damage is closely associated with aging and age-related neurodegenerative diseases, as molecular quality control mechanisms that prevent protein misfolding and aggregation decline with age, leading to the accumulation of harmful proteins in cells. Various model organisms have been used to study the mechanisms of protein toxicity acceleration or prevention, and understanding these mechanisms can help develop interventions that delay aging and age-related diseases by optimizing protein homeostasis.
Proteome damage plays a major role in aging and age-related neurodegenerative diseases. Under healthy conditions, molecular quality control mechanisms prevent toxic protein misfolding and aggregation. These mechanisms include molecular chaperones for protein folding, spatial compartmentalization for sequestration, and degradation pathways for the removal of harmful proteins. These mechanisms decline with age, resulting in the accumulation of aggregation-prone proteins that are harmful to cells. In the past decades, a variety of fast- and slow-aging model organisms have been used to investigate the biological mechanisms that accelerate or prevent such protein toxicity. In this review, we describe the most important mechanisms that are required for maintaining a healthy proteome. We describe how these mechanisms decline during aging and lead to toxic protein misassembly, aggregation, and amyloid formation. In addition, we discuss how optimized protein homeostasis mechanisms in long-living animals contribute to prolonging their lifespan. This knowledge might help us to develop interventions in the protein homeostasis network that delay aging and age-related pathologies.

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