In a groundbreaking advance that merges the power of synthetic biology with the complex biology of aging, researchers have engineered a novel yeast-based model to investigate the molecular underpinnings of premature cellular aging. Leveraging the simple eukaryotic organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a commonly used budding yeast renowned for its genetic tractability and conserved aging pathways, scientists have successfully expressed Progerin, the mutant protein central to Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Syndrome—a fatal premature aging disorder in humans. This innovative study illuminates how Progerin disrupts cellular function, offering unprecedented clarity into the mechanisms that drive pathological aging.
The research, conducted by a team led by Zachery R. Belak and corresponding author Troy A.A. Harkness, both affiliated with the University of Saskatchewan and the University of Alberta, capitalizes on the unique properties of yeast cells to serve as a model organism. Yeast provides a simplified yet remarkably accurate platform to dissect aging, thanks to the evolutionary conservation of many of the genes and biochemical pathways involved in lifespan regulation. By harnessing galactose-inducible promoters in yeast, the team engineered strains to express either the wild-type Lamin A protein or the aberrant Progerin fused to EGFP for visualization and quantification.
Progerin, a truncated, toxic variant of Lamin A, accumulates in the nuclear envelope of cells and is implicated in disrupting nuclear architecture, genome integrity, and cell viability in human progeroid syndromes. The engineered yeast strains revealed that Progerin expression drastically impedes growth, reduces chronological lifespan, and induces genome instability, effects starkly absent in cells expressing Lamin A. These findings firmly associate Progerin’s aberrant accumulation with the decline in cellular function and viability, recapitulating hallmark features of premature aging biology.
Detailed protein analysis with Western blotting confirmed that both EGFP-Lamin A and EGFP-Progerin localized efficiently to the nuclear membranes in yeast cells, asserting that the protein targeting mechanisms are functionally conserved. Progerin levels remained more stable and accumulated in aging mother cells, in contrast to Lamin A, which suggests that yeast sustain and exhibit age-dependent retention of toxic proteins paralleling observations in human cells. This accumulation likely exacerbates genome instability and compromises cellular homeostasis as cells age, providing a tractable system to dissect protein quality control pathways in aging.
Functional assays demonstrated that Progerin profoundly impairs cell proliferation. Growth curves revealed a significant slowdown in cell doubling rates in Progerin-expressing yeast compared to controls and Lamin A-expressing strains. This growth defect underscores the cellular stress and possible metabolic disruptions initiated by Progerin’s presence. Similarly, quantitative chronological lifespan assays employing methylene blue staining to determine live cell fraction confirmed that Progerin expression precipitates a marked reduction in post-mitotic survival, indicative of premature cellular senescence or death.
Genome integrity, a cornerstone of cellular longevity, was severely compromised in yeast expressing Progerin. Colony reversion assays using a strain harboring a mutation in the ADE2 gene highlighted a pronounced increase in white colony formation, a marker of genome instability due to mutational reversions in Progerin-expressing cells. This genomic destabilization mirrors the chromosome aberrations and DNA damage response defects seen in human progeroid fibroblasts, further validating yeast as an informative model organism for these pathologies.
The study’s design capitalized on the finely tunable expression system, allowing precise control over the timing and levels of Progerin induction, which is critical for delineating early cellular responses to toxic protein accumulation. This methodological approach enables baseline comparisons with the wild-type Lamin A and EGFP controls, separating Progerin-specific effects from general protein expression artifacts. Comprehensive statistical analyses reinforced the robustness of the data, confirming the significance of the observed phenotypes.
This yeast-based Progerin model not only replicates cardinal features of Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Syndrome but also bridges gaps in our understanding of how nuclear lamina perturbations translate into functional decline across species. By validating that toxic protein accumulation and retention in aging mother cells compromise genome stability and viability, the researchers have opened avenues for targeted genetic and pharmacological investigations aimed at ameliorating aging-related cellular dysfunction.
The implications of this research extend beyond childhood progeria syndromes. Considering that progerin-like cryptic splicing of Lamin A also occurs during normal aging in humans, this platform provides valuable insights into generalized aging mechanisms. The system affords unparalleled opportunities for high-throughput screening of genetic modifiers and potential therapeutics designed to mitigate toxic protein accumulation and promote cellular resilience.
Moreover, this model skillfully addresses the challenges inherent in studying human aging by offering an accelerated, genetically manipulable, and cost-effective experimental toolkit. Yeast cells, due to their rapid replication and well-characterized genetics, allow researchers to untangle complex aging processes at a molecular level unattainable in mammalian cells. This positions yeast as an indispensable tool for future aging research and drug discovery targeting proteinopathies and age-related genomic instability.
In synthesizing the data collected, it becomes evident that Progerin acts as a deleterious factor in yeast cells by impairing nuclear envelope functionality, destabilizing the genome, and shortening lifespan. Lamin A, by contrast, remains benign under similar experimental conditions, reinforcing the specific pathogenicity of Progerin. This differential effect highlights the nuanced contributions of nuclear lamina proteins to cellular aging and the importance of post-translational and splicing-related modifications.
The identification of Progerin’s stability and accumulation in yeast mother cells contributes to a growing body of evidence that aging cells exhibit impaired proteostasis and selective retention of damage. These findings resonate with current theories positing that the asymmetric segregation of damaged macromolecules contributes significantly to aging and cellular decline. By leveraging this yeast model, future studies can explore the molecular machinery responsible for damage retention, protein clearance, and lifespan extension.
This study exemplifies how integrating well-established model organisms with cutting-edge genetic tools can yield transformative insights into human diseases marked by premature aging. The researchers’ findings herald the emergence of new paradigms to combat age-related diseases through interventions that alleviate toxic protein aggregation and reinforce genome integrity. With the increasing demographic and societal impacts of aging populations, such foundational science is critical to informing therapeutic developments.
The impact of this work is anticipated to be far-reaching, catalyzing innovative approaches in aging research across disciplines. By spotlighting a direct causal link between Progerin accumulation, nuclear envelope disruption, and cellular demise in yeast, this model sharpens focus on the molecular scars of aging and expedites the search for remedies. The study’s open-access dissemination ensures wide accessibility, fostering collaborative efforts to unravel the intricacies of aging biology.
Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: Modeling premature aging in yeast via the expression of Progerin
News Publication Date: 3-Apr-2026
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Image Credits: Copyright: © 2026 Belak et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0).
Keywords: aging, Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Syndrome, yeast, Progerin, Lamin A, premature aging

