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Amyloid β accelerates age-related proteome-wide protein insolubility

Edward Anderton, Manish Chamoli, Dipa Bhaumik, Christina D. King, Xueshu Xie, Anna Foulger, Julie K. Andersen, Birgit Schilling, Gordon J. Lithgow

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2023 · ▲ 1 citations

Abstract

Loss of proteostasis(definition) is a highly conserved feature of aging across model organisms and typically results in the accumulation of insoluble protein aggregates. Protein insolubility is a central feature of major age-related neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's Disease (AD), where hundreds of insoluble proteins associate with aggregated amyloid beta (Aβ) in senile plaques. Moreover, proteins that become insoluble during aging in model organisms are capable of accelerating Aβ aggregation in vitro. Despite the connection between aging and AD risk, therapeutic approaches to date have overlooked aging-driven protein insolubility as a contributory factor. Here, using an unbiased proteomics approach, we questioned the relationship between Aβ and age-related protein insolubility. We demonstrate that Aβ expression drives proteome-wide protein insolubility in C. elegans and this insoluble proteome closely resembles the insoluble proteome driven by normal aging, suggesting the possibility of a vicious feedforward cycle of aggregation in the context of AD. Importantly, using human genome-wide association studies (GWAS), we show that the CIP is replete with biological processes implicated not only in neurodegenerative diseases but also across a broad array of chronic, age-related diseases (CARDs). This provides suggestive evidence that age-related loss of proteostasis could play a role in general CARD risk. Finally, we show that the CIP is enriched with proteins that modulate the toxic effects of Aβ and that the gut-derived metabolite, Urolithin A, relieves Aβ toxicity, supporting its use in clinical trials for dementia and other age-related diseases.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1101/2023.07.13.548937
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2026-06-03 MST

Cite this

APA
Anderton, E., Chamoli, M., Bhaumik, D., King, C.D., Xie, X., Foulger, A., Andersen, J.K., Schilling, B., &amp; Lithgow, G.J. (2023). Amyloid β accelerates age-related proteome-wide protein insolubility. <em>bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)</em>. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.07.13.548937
Vancouver
Anderton E, Chamoli M, Bhaumik D, King CD, Xie X, Foulger A, et al. Amyloid β accelerates age-related proteome-wide protein insolubility. bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory). 2023. doi:10.1101/2023.07.13.548937.
BibTeX
@unpublished{edward2023Amyloi, title = {Amyloid β accelerates age-related proteome-wide protein insolubility}, author = {Edward Anderton and Manish Chamoli and Dipa Bhaumik and Christina D. King and Xueshu Xie and Anna Foulger and Julie K. Andersen and Birgit Schilling and Gordon J. Lithgow}, journal = {bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)}, year = {2023}, doi = {10.1101/2023.07.13.548937}, }

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