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SON-dependent nuclear speckle rehabilitation alleviates proteinopathies

Author

Listed:
  • William Dion

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Yuren Tao

    (University of California)

  • Maci Chambers

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Shanshan Zhao

    (University of California)

  • Riley K. Arbuckle

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
    University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health)

  • Michelle Sun

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Syeda Kubra

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Matthew A. Schaich

    (University of Pittsburgh
    University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Yuhang Nie

    (University of California)

  • Megan Ye

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Imran Jamal

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Mads B. Larsen

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Daniel Camarco

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Eleanor Ickes

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Haokun H. Wang

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • C. DuPont

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Bingjie Wang

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Silvia Liu

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
    University of Pittsburgh
    University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Shaohua Pi

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Bennett Houten

    (University of Pittsburgh
    University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Bill B. Chen

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
    University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Yuanyuan Chen

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
    University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

  • Xu Chen

    (University of California)

  • Bokai Zhu

    (University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
    University of Pittsburgh
    University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine)

Abstract

Current treatments targeting individual protein quality control pathways have limited efficacy in alleviating proteinopathies, highlighting the prerequisite for a common druggable target capable of global proteostasis modulation. Building upon our prior research establishing nuclear speckles as pivotal membrane-less organelles for transcriptional control of proteostasis, we aim to alleviate proteinopathies through nuclear speckle rehabilitation. We identify pyrvinium pamoate as a nuclear speckle rehabilitator that enhances protein quality control gene expression and suppresses YAP1 transcriptional activity via decreasing the surface/interfacial tension of nuclear speckle condensates through interaction with the intrinsically disordered region of nuclear speckle scaffold protein SON. In pre-clinical models, nanomolar pyrvinium pamoate protects against retinal degeneration and tauopathy mainly by promoting autophagy and ubiquitin-proteasome activity in a SON-dependent manner without causing stress. Aberrant nuclear speckle morphology, reduced protein quality control and increased YAP1 activity are observed in human tauopathies. Our study provides proof-of-principle of targeting nuclear speckles to ameliorate proteinopathies.

Suggested Citation

  • William Dion & Yuren Tao & Maci Chambers & Shanshan Zhao & Riley K. Arbuckle & Michelle Sun & Syeda Kubra & Matthew A. Schaich & Yuhang Nie & Megan Ye & Imran Jamal & Mads B. Larsen & Daniel Camarco &, 2025. "SON-dependent nuclear speckle rehabilitation alleviates proteinopathies," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-23, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-62242-7
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-62242-7
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