Episodic transport of protein aggregates achieves a positive size selectivity in aggresome formation

  • Rui Fang
  • , Luolan Bai
  • , Bert M. Verheijen
  • , Boyan Li
  • , Kevin Dong
  • , Joao A. Paulo
  • , Mengying Zhou
  • , Yi Chi Chu
  • , Yuyu Song
  • , Michael Y. Sherman
  • , Steven Gygi
  • , Christine M. Field
  • , Timothy J. Mitchison
  • , Ying Lu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Eukaryotic cells direct toxic misfolded proteins to various quality control pathways based on their chemical properties and aggregation status. Aggregated proteins are targeted to selective autophagy or specifically sequestered into the “aggresome”, a perinuclear inclusion at the microtubule-organizing center (MTOC). However, the mechanism for selective aggresome recruitment remains unclear. To investigate this process, here we reconstitute MTOC-directed aggregate transport in Xenopus laevis egg extract using AgDD, a chemically inducible aggregation system. High-resolution single-particle tracking reveals that dynein-mediated aggregate transport is highly episodic, with average velocity positively correlating with aggregate size. Mechanistic modeling suggests that recurrent formation of the dynein transport complex biases larger aggregates towards active transport, compensating for the slowdown due to viscosity. Both episodic transport and positive size selectivity are conferred by aggresome-specific dynein adapters. Coupling an aggresome adapter to polystyrene beads recapitulates positive size selectivity in transport, while recruiting conventional dynein adapters to protein aggregates perturbs aggresome formation and reverses the size selectivity.

Original languageEnglish
Article number7852
JournalNature Communications
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

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