Recognition, partitioning, and asymmetrical segregation of protein aggregates – links to aging

Thomas Nyström, Professor
Department of Chemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Thursday, February 25, 2016 - 11:00am
CCBR Red Room
Invited Speaker Seminar
Abstract: 
Asymmetric cell division is key to cell renewal and the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae utilizes such asymmetrical division to generate a rejuvenated daughter cell from a mother cell that grows progressively older with each cell division and finally perishes - the hallmark of replicative aging. This singular division event provides a tractable model for how age physiognomies are reset in the progeny and we have previously shown that the generation of a pristine daughter cell encompasses spatial protein quality control (SQC) including an asymmetrical segregation and compartmentalization of cytoplasmic ‘aging factors’, such as damaged and aggregated proteins. Previous candidate approaches have revealed that the protein remodeling factor Hsp104, the anti-aging protein Sir2, the actin cytoskeleton, and actin polarity machinery are required for this asymmetrical inheritance of aberrant and aggregated proteins. We have now used high-content-imaging (HCI) combined with synthetic genetic array (SGA) technology in a systematic, genome-wide, screen for genes required for formation, recognition, and asymmetric inheritance of aggregates. Apart from requiring members of the polarity machinery, recognition and deposition of aggregates into inclusions involve key factors engaged in peroxide-signaling, vesicle transport, and tethering to specific organelles, some of which act as pace-setters of aging.
Host: 
Charles Boone, Professor, The Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research, Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Toronto
The Donnelly Centre and the Department of Molecular Genetics seminar
Co-sponsor: 
The Donnelly Centre | Department of Molecular Genetics