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Proteotoxic stress and ageing triggers the loss of redox homeostasis across cellular compartments.


ABSTRACT: The cellular proteostasis network integrates the protein folding and clearance machineries in multiple sub-cellular compartments of the eukaryotic cell. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the site of synthesis and folding of membrane and secretory proteins. A distinctive feature of the ER is its tightly controlled redox homeostasis necessary for the formation of inter- and intra-molecular disulphide bonds. Employing genetically encoded in vivo sensors reporting on the redox state in an organelle-specific manner, we show in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans that the redox state of the ER is subject to profound changes during worm lifetime. In young animals, the ER is oxidizing and this shifts towards reducing conditions during ageing, whereas in the cytosol the redox state becomes more oxidizing with age. Likewise, the redox state in the cytosol and the ER change in an opposing manner in response to proteotoxic challenges in C. elegans and in HeLa cells revealing conservation of redox homeostasis. Moreover, we show that organelle redox homeostasis is regulated across tissues within C. elegans providing a new measure for organismal fitness.

SUBMITTER: Kirstein J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4570520 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Proteotoxic stress and ageing triggers the loss of redox homeostasis across cellular compartments.

Kirstein Janine J   Morito Daisuke D   Kakihana Taichi T   Sugihara Munechika M   Minnen Anita A   Hipp Mark S MS   Nussbaum-Krammer Carmen C   Kasturi Prasad P   Hartl F Ulrich FU   Nagata Kazuhiro K   Morimoto Richard I RI  

The EMBO journal 20150729 18


The cellular proteostasis network integrates the protein folding and clearance machineries in multiple sub-cellular compartments of the eukaryotic cell. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the site of synthesis and folding of membrane and secretory proteins. A distinctive feature of the ER is its tightly controlled redox homeostasis necessary for the formation of inter- and intra-molecular disulphide bonds. Employing genetically encoded in vivo sensors reporting on the redox state in an organelle-  ...[more]

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