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Editorial: Proteostasis disruption in neurodegenerative disorders: mechanisms and treatment strategies
Jonasz Jeremiasz Weber, Hiroaki Taniguchi, Maxim Sokolov
Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience · 2026 · ▲ 1 citations
Loss of proteostasis
Disabled macroautophagy
Mitochondrial dysfunction
Chronic inflammation
Partial reprogramming (OSK)
Human
Review
Abstract
Proteostasis(definition) -the dynamic balance of protein synthesis, folding, trafficking, and degradationis essential for cellular homeostasis and organismal health. In neurons, which are long-lived and largely irreplaceable, the maintenance of a functional proteome is particularly critical and vulnerable to age-related decline. Indeed, aging represents the major risk factor for most neurodegenerative disorders, which are characterized by a progressive breakdown of neuronal proteostasis and the accumulation of misfolded and aggregation-prone proteins (Hou et al., 2019). These aberrant protein species can evade or overwhelm cellular quality control systems, disrupt synaptic and mitochondrial function, and trigger neuroinflammatory responses, ultimately leading to neuronal dysfunction and degeneration. In this Research Topic, we bring together six contributions that address key molecular mechanisms underlying neuronal proteostasis failure and explore emerging concepts and therapeutic strategies aimed at restoring protein homeostasis in neurodegenerative disease. A central feature of proteostasis disruption is the misfolding, self-association/oligomerization, and aggregation of disease-linked proteins, processes that can overwhelm compensatory chaperone-based and proteolytic machineries (Soto, 2003;Soto & Pritzkow, 2018). In recent years, additional layers of complexity have emerged, including the role of liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS), whereby proteins form liquid-like condensates that may precede aggregation (Babinchak & Surewicz, 2020), as well as the existence of distinct conformational strains associated with differential toxicity. These concepts are comprehensively reviewed by Ruiz-Ortega, Wilkaniec, and Adamczyk, who focus on α-synuclein aggregation in the context of Parkinson's disease. The authors highlight how diverse cellular environments modulate αsynuclein conformational states and conclude that distinct resulting strains give rise to heterogeneous pathological consequences relevant to the spectrum of synucleinopathies. Protein misfolding and conformational dysregulation do not necessarily represent irreversible determinants of protein fate, as rescue mechanisms -most prominently molecular chaperones -can assist denatured proteins in refolding toward their native states and thereby protect neurons from proteotoxic stress (Balchin et al., 2016;Lindberg et al., 2015;Muchowski & Wacker, 2005). In their review article, Varte & Rincon-Limas focus on the chaperonin TCP-1 ring complex (TRiC), a folding machinery responsible for the correct folding of approximately 10% of the proteome (Lopez et al., 2015). The authors highlight the role of TRiC in neurological disorders and describe how this complex can modulate the aggregation of various diseaselinked proteins. Importantly, they discuss emerging therapeutic strategies that aim to exploit TRiC-dependent mechanisms of protein refolding and disaggregation to counteract neurodegenerative processes. While proper folding and refolding are critical for maintaining protein integrity, the efficient removal of dysfunctional or surplus proteins is equally essential for proteostasis, both to prevent proteotoxicity and to recycle cellular resources. Neurons rely heavily on ubiquitindependent proteasomal degradation and autophagy(definition), processes that are regulated at multiple levels, ranging from transcriptional control to post-translational modifications (Ciechanover & Brundin, 2003;Ciechanover & Livneh, 2025;Le Guerroué & Youle, 2021). In their review article, Khodadadi et al. discuss the transcription factor NFE2L1/NRF1 as a central regulator of proteasomal function. The authors describe how NFE2L1 controls proteasome biogenesis, interacts with autophagy and mitophagy pathways, and influences processes such as ferroptosis, all within the context of neuronal physiology and neurodegenerative disease. Neuronal proteostasis also critically depends on the integrity and functionality of specific proteases, including mitochondrial enzymes such as the m-AAA protease (Patron et al., 2018). Loss of its catalytic subunit, AFG3L2, disrupts mitochondrial proteostasis, respiration, and calcium homeostasis, with pathogenic mutations causing spinocerebellar ataxia type 28 (SCA28) and spastic ataxia type 5 (SPAX5) (Di Bella et al., 2010;König et al., 2016;Pierson et al., 2011). In their original research article, Oeztuerk et al. employ a multi-omics-based phenotyping approach to analyze AFG3L2-mutant lymphoblasts derived from a SPAX5 patient. They identify a broad spectrum of mitochondria-associated perturbations, including impaired calcium handling, dysregulation of cytoskeletal organization and vesicle transport, as well as alterations in lipid and steroid metabolism. These findings illustrate the extensive downstream consequences of impaired mitochondrial proteostasis on cellular homeostasis.A complementary perspective on the interplay between lipid and steroid metabolism and proteostasis is provided by the mini-review article from Pereira Sena and colleagues. While disturbances in lipid metabolism -particularly the disease-modifying role of apolipoprotein Eare well established in neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease (He et al., 2025;Jackson et al., 2024), the authors broaden this view to encompass both sporadic conditions, including cerebral amyloid angiopathy, and monogenic neurodegenerative disorders such as polyglutamine spinocerebellar ataxias. They discuss how dysregulation of lipid homeostasis can negatively impact proteostasis and thereby promote protein misfolding and aggregation across diverse neurodegenerative disease entities. Finally, in their opinion article, Sokolov, Taniguchi, and Weber explore unconventional strategies aimed at enhancing proteasomal degradation to counteract protein dyshomeostasis in neurons. The proposed approaches -representing potentially untapped future avenuesrange from modulation of transcriptional programs gov
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- 10.3389/fnmol.2026.1796704
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APA
Weber, J.J., Taniguchi, H., & Sokolov, M. (2026). Editorial: Proteostasis disruption in neurodegenerative disorders: mechanisms and treatment strategies. <em>Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience</em>. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnmol.2026.1796704
Vancouver
Weber JJ, Taniguchi H, Sokolov M. Editorial: Proteostasis disruption in neurodegenerative disorders: mechanisms and treatment strategies. Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience. 2026. doi:10.3389/fnmol.2026.1796704.
BibTeX
@article{jonasz2026Editor,
title = {Editorial: Proteostasis disruption in neurodegenerative disorders: mechanisms and treatment strategies},
author = {Jonasz Jeremiasz Weber and Hiroaki Taniguchi and Maxim Sokolov},
journal = {Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience},
year = {2026},
doi = {10.3389/fnmol.2026.1796704},
}
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