The GET pathway is a major bottleneck for maintaining proteostasis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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Abstract

A hallmark of aging in a variety of organisms is a breakdown of proteostasis and an ensuing accumulation of protein aggregates and inclusions. However, it is not clear if the proteostasis network suffers from a uniform breakdown during aging or if some distinct components act as bottlenecks especially sensitive to functional decline. Here, we report on a genome-wide, unbiased, screen for single genes in young cells of budding yeast required to keep the proteome aggregate-free under non-stress conditions as a means to identify potential proteostasis bottlenecks. We found that the GET pathway, required for the insertion of tail-anchored (TA) membrane proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum, is such a bottleneck as single mutations in either GET3, GET2 or GET1 caused accumulation of cytosolic Hsp104- and mitochondria-associated aggregates in nearly all cells when growing at 30 °C (non-stress condition). Further, results generated by a second screen identifying proteins aggregating in GET mutants and analyzing the behavior of cytosolic reporters of misfolding, suggest that there is a general collapse in proteostasis in GET mutants that affects other proteins than TA proteins.

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Josefson, R., Kumar, N., Hao, X., Liu, B., & Nyström, T. (2023). The GET pathway is a major bottleneck for maintaining proteostasis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Scientific Reports, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-35666-8

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