Sarah Mae Penir's profile photo

Sarah Mae Penir

Featured in: Favicon nature.com Favicon cell.com

Articles

  • Jun 20, 2024 | nature.com | Katarina Harasimov |Luisa M. Welp |Sarah Mae Penir |Yehor Horokhovskyi |Shiya Cheng |Katsuyoshi Takaoka | +13 more

    Women are born with all of their oocytes. The oocyte proteome must be maintained with minimal damage throughout the woman’s reproductive life, and hence for decades. Here we report that oocyte and ovarian proteostasis involves extreme protein longevity. Mouse ovaries had more extremely long-lived proteins than other tissues, including brain. These long-lived proteins had diverse functions, including in mitochondria, the cytoskeleton, chromatin and proteostasis. The stable proteins resided not only in oocytes but also in long-lived ovarian somatic cells. Our data suggest that mammals increase protein longevity and enhance proteostasis by chaperones and cellular antioxidants to maintain the female germline for long periods. Indeed, protein aggregation in oocytes did not increase with age and proteasome activity did not decay. However, increasing protein longevity cannot fully block female germline senescence. Large-scale proteome profiling of ~8,890 proteins revealed a decline in many long-lived proteins of the proteostasis network in the aging ovary, accompanied by massive proteome remodeling, which eventually leads to female fertility decline. Harasimov, Gorry, Welp, Penir, Horokhovskyi et al. analyse proteostasis in mammalian oocytes and ovaries: the maintenance of oocytes involves exceptional protein longevity, and many of the extremely long-lived proteins decline as the ovary ages.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →