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Many diseases appear to be caused by the misregulation of protein maintenance. Such diseases of protein homeostasis, or “proteostasis,” include loss-of-function diseases (cystic fibrosis) and gain-of-toxic-function diseases (Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and Huntington's disease). Proteostasis is maintained by the proteostasis network, which comprises pathways that control protein synthesis, folding, trafficking, aggregation, disaggregation, and degradation. The decreased ability of the proteostasis network to cope with inherited misfolding-prone proteins, aging, and/or metabolic/environmental stress appears to trigger or exacerbate proteostasis diseases. Herein, we review recent evidence supporting the principle that proteostasis is influenced both by an adjustable proteostasis network capacity and protein folding energetics, which together determine the balance between folding efficiency, misfolding, protein degradation, and aggregation. We review how small molecules can enhance proteostasis by binding to and stabilizing specific proteins (pharmacologic chaperones) or by increasing the proteostasis network capacity (proteostasis regulators). We propose that such therapeutic strategies, including combination therapies, represent a new approach for treating a range of diverse human maladies.
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Download Supplemental Figure 1 (PDF): Expression profiling of human proteostasis network components in 80 human tissues (171). Hierarchical clustering was used to group proteostasis network components (y-axis on right) on basis of the similarity of their expression profiles across the 80-tissue array (x-axis on top). A dendrogram is provided where lengths of the branches leading up to each node directly reflect the degree of correlation between the expression profiles as assessed by the pair-wise similarity function described. The heat map illustrates abundance as higher (red ) or lower ( green) relative to the mean (black) value across all tissues.