Skip to content
Preprint · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Shift of the insoluble content of the proteome in aging mouse brain

Cristen Molzahn, Erich R. Kuechler, Irina Zemlyankina, Lorenz Nieves, Tahir Ali, Grace Cole, Jing Wang, Razvan F. Albu, Mang Zhu, Neil R. Cashman, Sabine Gilch, Aly Karsan, Philipp F. Lange, Jörg Gsponer, Thibault Mayor

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2022 · ▲ 1 citations

Abstract

Abstract Aging and protein aggregation diseases are inextricably linked. During aging, cellular response to unfolded proteins are believed to decline which results in diminished protein homeostasis (proteostasis(definition)). Indeed, in model organisms, such as C. elegans , proteostatic decline with age has even been linked to the onset of aggregation of proteins in wild-type animals. However, this correlation has not been extensively characterized in aging mammals. To reveal the insoluble portion of the proteome, we analyzed the detergent-insoluble fraction of mouse brain tissues after high-speed centrifugation by quantitative mass spectrometry. We identified a cohort of 171 proteins enriched in the pellet fraction of older mice including the alpha crystallin small heat shock protein. We then performed a meta-analysis to compare features among distinct groups of detergent-insoluble proteins reported in the literature. Surprisingly, our analysis revealed that features associated with proteins found in the pellet fraction differ depending on the ages of the mice. In general, insoluble proteins from young models (<15 weeks) were more likely to be RNA-binding, more disordered and more likely to be found in membraneless organelles. These traits become less prominent with age within the combined dataset, as proteins with more structure enter the pellet fraction. This analysis suggests that age-related changes to proteome organization lead a specific group of proteins to enter the pellet fraction as a result of loss of proteostasis.

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

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1101/2022.12.13.520290
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-03 MST

Cite this

APA
Molzahn, C., Kuechler, E.R., Zemlyankina, I., Nieves, L., Ali, T., Cole, G., Wang, J., Albu, R.F., Zhu, M., Cashman, N.R., Gilch, S., Karsan, A., Lange, P.F., Gsponer, J., &amp; Mayor, T. (2022). Shift of the insoluble content of the proteome in aging mouse brain. <em>bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)</em>. https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.12.13.520290
Vancouver
Molzahn C, Kuechler ER, Zemlyankina I, Nieves L, Ali T, Cole G, et al. Shift of the insoluble content of the proteome in aging mouse brain. bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory). 2022. doi:10.1101/2022.12.13.520290.
BibTeX
@unpublished{cristen2022Shifto, title = {Shift of the insoluble content of the proteome in aging mouse brain}, author = {Cristen Molzahn and Erich R. Kuechler and Irina Zemlyankina and Lorenz Nieves and Tahir Ali and Grace Cole and Jing Wang and Razvan F. Albu and Mang Zhu and Neil R. Cashman and Sabine Gilch and Aly Karsan and Philipp F. Lange and Jörg Gsponer and Thibault Mayor}, journal = {bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.1101/2022.12.13.520290}, }

Research neighborhood

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

Related findings