Proteostasis collapse, a hallmark of aging, hinders the chaperone-Start network and arrests cells in G1

Author

Moreno, David F.

Jenkins, Kirsten

Morlot, Sandrine

Charvin, Gilles

Csikász-Nagy, Attila

Aldea Malo, Martí

Publication date

2019-09-13



Abstract

Loss of proteostasis and cellular senescence are key hallmarks of aging, but direct cause-effect relationships are not well understood. We show that most yeast cells arrest in G1 before death with low nuclear levels of Cln3, a key G1 cyclin extremely sensitive to chaperone status. Chaperone availability is seriously compromised in aged cells, and the G1 arrest coincides with massive aggregation of a metastable chaperone-activity reporter. Moreover, G1-cyclin overexpression increases lifespan in a chaperone-dependent manner. As a key prediction of a model integrating autocatalytic protein aggregation and a minimal Start network, enforced protein aggregation causes a severe reduction in lifespan, an effect that is greatly alleviated by increased expression of specific chaperones or cyclin Cln3. Overall, our data show that proteostasis breakdown, by compromising chaperone activity and G1-cyclin function, causes an irreversible arrest in G1, configuring a molecular pathway postulating proteostasis decay as a key contributing effector of cell senescence.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Accepted version

Language

English

CDU Subject

61 - Medical sciences

Subjects and keywords

Marques de contrast; Hallmarks; Marcas de contraste; Cells; Células; Cèl·lules; Cln3

Pages

27

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications

Collection

8;

Note

We thank E Rebollo, J Comas and M Kerexeta for technical assistance, and DE Gottschling, J Skotheim and KA Morano for providing strains. We also thank C Rose for editing the manuscript, and F Antequera, Y Barral, and C Gallego for helpful comments. This work was funded by the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness of Spain, Consolider-Ingenio 2010, and the European Union (FEDER) to MA. KJ was supported by the EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Cross-Disciplinary Approaches to Non-Equilibrium Systems (CANES, EP/L015854/1). DFM received an FI fellow of Generalitat de Catalunya.

Version of

eLife

Rights

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

This item appears in the following Collection(s)