Publications by authors named "Giel Korsten"

Intermediate-length repeat expansions in ATAXIN-2 (ATXN2) are the strongest genetic risk factor for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). At the molecular level, ATXN2 intermediate expansions enhance TDP-43 toxicity and pathology. However, whether this triggers ALS pathogenesis at the cellular and functional level remains unknown.

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Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by a polyglutamine expansion of the huntingtin protein, resulting in the formation of polyglutamine aggregates. The mechanisms of toxicity that result in the complex HD pathology remain only partially understood. Here, we show that nuclear polyglutamine aggregates induce nuclear envelope (NE) blebbing and ruptures that are often repaired incompletely.

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Selective autophagy of protein aggregates, called aggrephagy, is vital for maintaining cellular homeostasis. Classically, studying aggrephagy has been challenging due to the infrequent occurrence of autophagic events and the lack of control over the specificity and timing of protein aggregation. We previously reported two variants of a PIM (particles induced by multimerization) assay that enable the formation of chemically induced, fluorescently labeled protein aggregates in cells.

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Degradation of aggregates by selective autophagy is important as damaged proteins may impose a threat to cellular homeostasis. Although the core components of the autophagy machinery are well characterized, the spatiotemporal regulation of many selective autophagy processes, including aggrephagy, remains largely unexplored. Furthermore, because most live-cell imaging studies have so far focused on starvation-induced autophagy, little is known about the dynamics of aggrephagy.

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