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Stress induced nuclear granules form in response to accumulation of misfolded proteins in Caenorhabditis elegans.

Katherine M SampudaMason RileyLynn Boyd
Published in: BMC cell biology (2017)
The heat shock results suggest that chaperone expression can prevent SING formation and that the accumulation of damaged or misfolded proteins is a necessary precursor to SING formation. Thus, SINGs may be part of a novel protein quality control system. The data suggest an interesting model where SINGs represent sites of localized protein degradation for nuclear or cytosolic proteins. Thus, the physiological impacts of environmental stress may begin at the cellular level with the formation of stress induced nuclear granules.
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