Research Keyword: proteostasis

Autophagy and the Mitochondrial Lon1 Protease Are Necessary for Botrytis cinerea Heat Adaptation

Scientists studied how a fungus that causes gray mold disease adapts to heat stress by examining two key cellular processes: autophagy (cellular cleanup) and a mitochondrial protease called Lon1. They found that both processes work together to help the fungus survive high temperatures by removing damaged cellular components and maintaining healthy mitochondria. When either process was disrupted, the fungus became much more vulnerable to heat and could not survive as well.

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Strain-specific effects of Desulfovibrio on neurodegeneration and oxidative stress in a Caenorhabditis elegans PD model

This research shows that different strains of bacteria called Desulfovibrio have very different effects on brain health. When scientists exposed worms to six different strains, they found that environmental strains actually protected against Parkinson’s-like symptoms, while strains from human patients and animals caused more damage. The worms strongly preferred to eat the environmental strains, suggesting they could sense which bacteria were harmful. This highlights how the type of bacteria in our gut matters just as much as the total amount.

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