| Literature DB >> 25941938 |
Sundararaghavan Pattabiraman1, Daniel Kaganovich1.
Abstract
Aging is universally associated with organism-wide dysfunction and a decline in cellular fitness. From early development onwards, the efficiency of self-repair, energy production, and homeostasis all decrease. Due to the multiplicity of systems that undergo agingrelated decline, the mechanistic basis of organismal aging has been difficult to pinpoint. At the cellular level, however, recent work has provided important insight. Cellular aging is associated with the accumulation of several types of damage, in particular damage to the proteome and organelles. Groundbreaking studies have shown that replicative aging is the result of a rejuvenation mechanism that prevents the inheritance of damaged components during division, thereby confining the effects of aging to specific cells, while removing damage from others. Asymmetric inheritance of misfolded and aggregated proteins, as well as reduced mitochondria, has been shown in yeast. Until recently, however, it was not clear whether a similar mechanism operates in mammalian cells, which were thought to mostly divide symmetrically. Our group has recently shown that vimentin establishes mitotic polarity in immortalized mammalian cells, and mediates asymmetric partitioning of multiple factors through direct interaction. These findings prompt a provocative hypothesis: that intermediate filaments serve as asymmetric partitioning modules or "sponges" that, when expressed prior to mitosis, can "clean" emerging cells of the damage they have accumulated.Entities:
Keywords: IPOD; JUNQ; P-bodies; Vimentin Intermediate Filament (VIF); aggregation; aggresome; asymmetric aging; dynamic droplets; inclusion; misfolded protein; replicative rejuvenation; stress foci; stress granules
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25941938 PMCID: PMC4914029 DOI: 10.1080/19490992.2015.1014213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioarchitecture ISSN: 1949-0992