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Impaired biogenesis of basic proteins impacts multiple hallmarks of the aging brain.

Domenico Di FraiaAntonio MarinoJae Ho LeeErika Kelmer SacramentoMario BaumgartSara BagnoliPedro Tomaz da SilvaAmit Kumar SahuGiacomo SianoMax TiessenEva Terzibasi-TozziniJulien GagneurJudith FrydmanAlessandro CellerinoAlessandro Ori
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Aging and neurodegeneration entail diverse cellular and molecular hallmarks. Here, we studied the effects of aging on the transcriptome, translatome, and multiple layers of the proteome in the brain of a short-lived killifish. We reveal that aging causes widespread reduction of proteins enriched in basic amino acids that is independent of mRNA regulation, and it is not due to impaired proteasome activity. Instead, we identify a cascade of events where aberrant translation pausing leads to reduced ribosome availability resulting in proteome remodeling independently of transcriptional regulation. Our research uncovers a vulnerable point in the aging brain's biology - the biogenesis of basic DNA/RNA binding proteins. This vulnerability may represent a unifying principle that connects various aging hallmarks, encompassing genome integrity and the biosynthesis of macromolecules.
Keyphrases
  • white matter
  • resting state
  • genome wide
  • amino acid
  • multiple sclerosis
  • dna methylation
  • circulating tumor
  • cell free
  • solid state