Monitoring Newly
Synthesized Proteins over the Adult Life Span of <i>Caenorhabditis
elegans</i>
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Abstract
Little
is known regarding how the synthesis and degradation of individual
proteins change during the life of an organism. Such knowledge is
vital to understanding the aging process. To fill this knowledge gap,
we monitored newly synthesized proteins on a proteome scale in <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i> over time during adulthood using
a stable-isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture (SILAC)-based
label-chase approach. For most proteins, the rate of appearance of
newly synthesized protein was high during the first 5 days of adulthood,
slowed down between the fifth and the 11th days, and then increased
again after the 11th day. However, the magnitude of appearance rate
differed significantly from protein to protein. For example, the appearance
of newly synthesized protein was fast for proteins involved in embryonic
development, transcription regulation, and lipid binding/transport,
with >70% of these proteins newly synthesized by day 5 of adulthood,
whereas it was slow for proteins involved in cellular assembly and
motility, such as actin and myosin, with <70% of these proteins
newly synthesized even on day 16. The late-life increase of newly
synthesized protein was especially high for ribosomal proteins and
ATP synthases. We also investigated the effect of RNAi-mediated knockdown
of the <i>rpl-9 (</i>ribosomal protein), <i>atp-3 (</i>ATP synthase), and <i>ril-1 (</i>RNAi-induced longevity-1)
genes and found that inhibiting the expression of <i>atp-3</i> and <i>ril-1</i> beginning in late adulthood is still
effective to extend the life span of <i>C. elegans.</i