Nature Communications (Oct 2024)

Transcript errors generate amyloid-like proteins in human cells

  • Claire S. Chung,
  • Yi Kou,
  • Sarah J. Shemtov,
  • Bert M. Verheijen,
  • Ilse Flores,
  • Kayla Love,
  • Ashley Del Dosso,
  • Max A. Thorwald,
  • Yuchen Liu,
  • Daniel Hicks,
  • Yingwo Sun,
  • Renaldo G. Toney,
  • Lucy Carrillo,
  • Megan M. Nguyen,
  • Huang Biao,
  • Yuxin Jin,
  • Ashley Michelle Jauregui,
  • Juan Diaz Quiroz,
  • Elizabeth Head,
  • Darcie L. Moore,
  • Stephen Simpson,
  • Kelley W. Thomas,
  • Marcelo P. Coba,
  • Zhongwei Li,
  • Bérénice A. Benayoun,
  • Joshua J. C. Rosenthal,
  • Scott R. Kennedy,
  • Giorgia Quadrato,
  • Jean-Francois Gout,
  • Lin Chen,
  • Marc Vermulst

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52886-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Aging is characterized by the accumulation of proteins that display amyloid-like behavior. However, the molecular mechanisms by which these proteins arise remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate that amyloid-like proteins are produced in a variety of human cell types, including stem cells, brain organoids and fully differentiated neurons by mistakes that occur in messenger RNA molecules. Some of these mistakes generate mutant proteins already known to cause disease, while others generate proteins that have not been observed before. Moreover, we show that these mistakes increase when cells are exposed to DNA damage, a major hallmark of human aging. When taken together, these experiments suggest a mechanistic link between the normal aging process and age-related diseases.