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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/frontotemporal lobar degeneration-linked proteins, TDP-43 and fused in sarcoma (FUS), bind to G-quadruplex-containing mRNAs and transport them to distal neurites for local translation. The specificity and mechanism of G4-RNA binding, however, remain largely unsolved. Using purified full-length TDP-43 and FUS and a set of seven G4-DNA/RNA, we compared their recognition properties of G4-RNAs. Both TDP-43 and FUS recognized and bound to G4-DNA/RNAs, but the target selectivity differed between two proteins. TDP-43 recognized only parallel-stranded G4-DNA/RNAs, leading to stabilize the G4 conformation. In contrast, FUS bound to all three types, parallel, hybrid, and antiparallel, of G4-DNA/RNAs, resulting in deformation of the G4 structure. We then concluded that the target selectivity and the influence on G4 RNA structure differed between TDP-43 and FUS.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/1873-3468.14013 | DOI Listing |
Nat Aging
September 2025
Institute for Integrated Stress Response Signaling, Faculty of Medicine, University Hospital Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
Aging is a major risk factor for neurodegenerative diseases associated with protein aggregation, including Huntington's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Although these diseases involve different aggregation-prone proteins, their common late onset suggests a link to converging changes resulting from aging. In this study, we found that age-associated hyperactivation of EPS8/RAC signaling in Caenorhabditis elegans promotes the pathological aggregation of Huntington's disease-related polyglutamine repeats and ALS-associated mutant FUS and TDP-43 variants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
August 2025
Maxwell Centre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of Cambridge, J J Thomson Avenue, Cambridge, CB3 0HE, UK.
Biomolecular condensates play wide-ranging roles in cellular compartmentalization and biological processes. However, their transition from a functional liquid-like phase into a solid-like state-usually termed as condensate ageing-represents a hallmark associated with the onset of multiple neurodegenerative diseases. In this study, we design a computational pipeline to explore potential candidates, in the form of small peptides, to regulate ageing kinetics in biomolecular condensates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Mol Sci
August 2025
Puls Med Association, 051885 Bucharest, Romania.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is still a heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorder that can be identified clinically and biologically, without a strong set of biomarkers that can adequately measure its fast rate of progression and molecular heterogeneity. In this review, we intend to consolidate the most relevant and timely advances in ALS biomarker discovery, in order to begin to bring molecular, imaging, genetic, and digital areas together for potential integration into a precision medicine approach to ALS. Our goal is to begin to display how several biomarkers in development (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomedicines
August 2025
Medical Section, Romanian Academy, 010071 Bucharest, Romania.
Neurodegeneration is increasingly recognized not as a linear trajectory of protein accumulation, but as a multidimensional collapse of biological organization-spanning intracellular signaling, transcriptional identity, proteostatic integrity, organelle communication, and network-level computation. This review intends to synthesize emerging frameworks that reposition neurodegenerative diseases (ND) as progressive breakdowns of interpretive cellular logic, rather than mere terminal consequences of protein aggregation or synaptic attrition. The discussion aims to provide a detailed mapping of how critical signaling pathways-including PI3K-AKT-mTOR, MAPK, Wnt/β-catenin, and integrated stress response cascades-undergo spatial and temporal disintegration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cell Biol
October 2025
Division of Regenerative Medicine, Research Center for Medical Sciences, The Jikei University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
TDP-43, an RNA-binding protein (RBP) encoded by the TARDBP gene, is crucial for understanding the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases like amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal lobar degeneration. Dysregulated TDP-43 causes motor neuron loss, highlighting the need for proper expression levels. Here, we identify a dominant-negative isoform among the multiple TARDBP splicing variants and validate its endogenous expression using a developed antibody against its translated product.
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