Litcius/Paper detail

Nucleophagy delays aging and preserves germline immortality

Margarita‐Elena Papandreou, Georgios Konstantinidis, Nektarios Tavernarakis

2022Nature Aging30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Marked alterations in nuclear ultrastructure are a universal hallmark of aging, progeroid syndromes and other age-related pathologies. Here we show that autophagy of nuclear proteins is an important determinant of fertility and aging. Impairment of nucleophagy diminishes stress resistance, germline immortality and longevity. We found that the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans nuclear envelope anchor protein, nuclear anchorage protein 1 (ANC-1) and its mammalian ortholog nesprin-2 are cleared out by autophagy and restrict nucleolar size, a biomarker of aging. We further uncovered a germline immortality assurance mechanism, which involves nucleolar degradation at the most proximal oocyte by ANC-1 and key autophagic components. Perturbation of this clearance pathway causes tumor-like structures in C. elegans, and genetic ablation of nesprin-2 causes ovarian carcinomas in mice. Thus, autophagic recycling of nuclear components is a conserved soma longevity and germline immortality mechanism that promotes youthfulness and delays aging under conditions of stress.

Topics & Concepts

GermlineBiologyAutophagyCell biologyProteostasisImmortalityCaenorhabditis elegansLongevityGeneticsSenescenceGeneApoptosisNuclear Structure and FunctionDNA Repair MechanismsGenetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model Organisms