Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Aging and the aggregating proteome

Della David

Frontiers in Genetics · 2012 · ▲ 80 citations

Abstract

For all organisms promoting protein homeostasis is a high priority in order to optimize cellular functions and resources. However, there is accumulating evidence that aging leads to a collapse in protein homeostasis and widespread non-disease protein aggregation. This review examines these findings and discusses the potential causes and consequences of this physiological aggregation with age in particular in relation to disease protein aggregation and toxicity. Importantly, recent evidence points to unexpected differences in protein-quality-control and susceptibility to protein aggregation between neurons and other cell types. In addition, new insight into the cell-non-autonomous coordination of protein homeostasis by neurons will be presented.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.3389/fgene.2012.00247
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-10 MST

Cite this

APA
David, D. (2012). Aging and the aggregating proteome. <em>Frontiers in Genetics</em>. https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2012.00247
Vancouver
David D. Aging and the aggregating proteome. Frontiers in Genetics. 2012. doi:10.3389/fgene.2012.00247.
BibTeX
@article{della2012Aginga, title = {Aging and the aggregating proteome}, author = {Della David}, journal = {Frontiers in Genetics}, year = {2012}, doi = {10.3389/fgene.2012.00247}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings