Chaperone networks: Tipping the balance in protein folding diseases
Chaperone networks: Tipping the balance in protein folding diseases.
Neurobiol Dis. 2010 May 13;
Authors: Voisine C, Pedersen JS, Morimoto RI
Adult-onset neurodegeneration and other protein conformational diseases are associated with the appearance, persistence, and accumulation of misfolded and aggregation prone proteins. To protect the proteome from long-term damage, the cell expresses a highly integrated protein homeostasis (proteostasis) machinery to ensure that proteins are properly expressed, folded, and cleared, and to recognize damaged proteins. Molecular chaperones have a central role in proteostasis as they have been shown to be essential to prevent the accumulation of alternate folded proteotoxic states as occurs in protein conformation diseases exemplified by neurodegeneration. Studies using invertebrate models expressing proteins associated with Huntington’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, ALS, and Parkinson’s disease have provided insights into the genetic networks and stress signaling pathways that regulate the proteostasis machinery to prevent cellular dysfunction, tissue pathology, and organismal failure. These events appear to be further amplified by aging and provide evidence that age-related failures in proteostasis may be a common element in many diseases.
Research Papers
- Light-Driven Changes in Energy Metabolism Directly Entrain the Cyanobacterial Circadian Oscillator
- A Vision for a Biomedical Cloud (J Intern Med. 2011 Dec 5. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2796.2011.02491)
- Consequences of eukaryotic enhancer architecture for gene expression dynamics, development, and fitness (Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America)
- Genome-wide meta-analysis identifies variants associated with platinating agent susceptibility across populations.
- Rapid growth of a hepatocellular carcinoma and the driving mutations revealed by cell-population genetic analysis of whole-genome data (Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011 Jul 5.)
- A user's guide to the encyclopedia of DNA elements (ENCODE). (PLoS Biol. 2011 Apr;9(4):e1001046. Epub 2011 Apr 19)
