Efficient protein turnover is essential for cell homeostasis and organ function. Loss of proteostasis is a hallmark of aging, which culminates as a severe reduction in protein turnover rates. To investigate protein turnover dynamics during aging, we performed continuous in vivo metabolic stable isotope labeling using 15N amino acid precursors and TMT-based multiplexed proteomic analysis. First, we discovered that the brain proteome uniquely experiences dynamic global turnover fluctuations during aging compared to heart and liver tissue. Second, in the brain proteome, global protein turnover trends across aging displayed sex-specific differences that were tightly linked to their cellular compartments. Next, parallel analyses of the insoluble proteome revealed that distinct cellular compartments experience hampered turnover, at least partially due to misfolding. Finally, we discovered that age-associated fluctuations in the activity of the ubiquitin proteasome system were linked to the turnover of the catalytic core subunits. Taken together, our study provides a proteome-wide atlas of protein turnover across the aging continuum and highlights a new link between the turnover of individual proteasome subunits and the age-associated decline in proteosome activity.
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