Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
Ageing promotes microglial accumulation of slow-degrading synaptic proteins
Ian H. Guldner, Viktoria Wagner, Patricia Moran-Losada, Sophia M. Shi, Sophia W. Golub, Johannes F. Hevler, Kelly Chen, Barbara T Meese, Ali Ghoochani, Ernst H. Pulido, Hamilton Se-Hwee Oh, Yann Le Guen, Nannan Lu, Pui Shuen Wong, Ning-Sum To
Nature · 2026 · ▲ 8 citations
Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases affect 1 in 12 people globally and remain incurable. Central to their pathogenesis is a loss of neuronal protein maintenance and the accumulation of protein aggregates with ageing1,2. Here we engineered bioorthogonal tools3 that enabled us to tag the nascent neuronal proteome and study its turnover with ageing, its propensity to aggregate and its interaction with microglia. We show that neuronal protein half-life approximately doubles on average between 4-month-old and 24-month-old mice, with the stability of individual proteins differing among brain regions. Furthermore, we describe the aged neuronal ‘aggregome’, which encompasses 1,726 proteins, nearly half of which show reduced degradation with age. The aggregome includes well-known proteins linked to diseases and numerous proteins previously not associated with neurodegeneration. Notably, we demonstrate that neuronal proteins accumulate in aged microglia, with 54% also displaying reduced degradation and/or aggregation with age. Among these proteins, synaptic proteins are highly enriched, which suggests that there is a cascade of events that emerge from impaired synaptic protein turnover and aggregation to the disposal of these proteins, possibly through microglial engulfment of synapses. These findings reveal the substantial loss of neuronal proteome maintenance with ageing, which could be causal for age-related synapse loss and cognitive decline. Newly developed mouse models that enable cell-specific analyses of proteostasis(definition) dynamics across the lifespan of the mice reveal key aspects of neuronal proteostasis with ageing.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1038/s41586-025-09987-9
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-03 MST
Cite this
APA
Guldner, I.H., Wagner, V., Moran-Losada, P., Shi, S.M., Golub, S.W., Hevler, J.F., Chen, K., Meese, B.T., Ghoochani, A., Pulido, E.H., Oh, H.S., Guen, Y.L., Lu, N., Wong, P.S., To, N., Garceau, D., Guo, Z., Luo, J., Bertozzi, C.R., & Lundberg, E. (2026). Ageing promotes microglial accumulation of slow-degrading synaptic proteins. <em>Nature</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09987-9
Vancouver
Guldner IH, Wagner V, Moran-Losada P, Shi SM, Golub SW, Hevler JF, et al. Ageing promotes microglial accumulation of slow-degrading synaptic proteins. Nature. 2026. doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09987-9.
BibTeX
@article{ian2026Ageing,
title = {Ageing promotes microglial accumulation of slow-degrading synaptic proteins},
author = {Ian H. Guldner and Viktoria Wagner and Patricia Moran-Losada and Sophia M. Shi and Sophia W. Golub and Johannes F. Hevler and Kelly Chen and Barbara T Meese and Ali Ghoochani and Ernst H. Pulido and Hamilton Se-Hwee Oh and Yann Le Guen and Nannan Lu and Pui Shuen Wong and Ning-Sum To and Dylan Garceau and Zimin Guo and Jian Luo and Carolyn R. Bertozzi and Emma Lundberg and Abu-Remaileh Monther and Michael Sasner and Andreas Keller and Andrew C. Yang and Tom H. Cheung},
journal = {Nature},
year = {2026},
doi = {10.1038/s41586-025-09987-9},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
AIMS molecular science 2015
Open access · CC-BY
Protein clearance mechanisms and their demise in age-related neurodegenerative diseases
biorxiv 2024
Preprint · CC-BY
Targeting neuroinflammation by pharmacologic down-regulation of inflammatory pathways is neuroprotective in protein misfolding disorders.
The Journal of Physiology 2023
Open access · CC-BY
Current limitations and future opportunities of tracer studies of muscle ageing
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) 2022
Preprint · CC-BY
Shift of the insoluble content of the proteome in aging mouse brain
Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology 2019
Open access · OA
Functional Modules of the Proteostasis Network
Cell Death and Disease 2011
Open access · CC-BY