Majewska J. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2025)
Nature Aging.
5,
2,
p. 182-183
5435.
Iltis, Moskalevska and colleagues investigate how the innate immune system regulates the age-related accumulation of senescent cells. They show that upregulation of the GD3 ganglioside-based immune checkpoint enables senescent cells to evade immune surveillance mediated by natural killer cells during aging, and that targeting GD3 is protective in age-related disease.
Papismadov N., Levi N., Roitman L., Agrawal A., Ovadya Y., Cherqui U., Yosef R., Akiva H., Gal H. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2024)
EMBO Journal.
43,
22,
p. 5360-5380
Fibrosis and accumulation of senescent cells are common tissue changes associated with aging. Here, we show that the CDK inhibitor p21 (CDKN1A), known to regulate the cell cycle and the viability of senescent cells, also controls the expression of extracellular matrix (ECM) components in senescent and proliferating cells of the fibrotic lung, in a manner dependent on CDK4 and Rb phosphorylation. p21 knockout protects mice from the induction of lung fibrosis. Moreover, inducible p21 silencing during fibrosis development alleviates disease pathology, decreasing the inflammatory response and ECM accumulation in the lung, and reducing the amount of senescent cells. Furthermore, p21 silencing limits fibrosis progression even when introduced during disease development. These findings show that one common mechanism regulates both cell cycle progression and expression of ECM components, and suggest that targeting p21 might be a new approach for treating age-related fibrotic pathologies.
Ogrodnik M., Carlos Acosta J., Adams P. D., d'Adda di Fagagna F., Baker D. J., Bishop C. L., Chandra T., Collado M., Gil J., Gorgoulis V., Gruber F., Hara E., Jansen-Dürr P., Jurk D., Khosla S., Kirkland J. L., Krizhanovsky V., Minamino T., Niedernhofer L. J., Passos J. F., Ring N. A., Redl H., Robbins P. D., Rodier F., Scharffetter-Kochanek K., Sedivy J. M., Sikora E., Witwer K., von Zglinicki T., Yun M. H., Grillari J. & Demaria M.
(2024)
Cell.
187,
16,
p. 4150-4175
Cellular senescence is a cell fate triggered in response to stress and is characterized by stable cell-cycle arrest and a hypersecretory state. It has diverse biological roles, ranging from tissue repair to chronic disease. The development of new tools to study senescence in vivo has paved the way for uncovering its physiological and pathological roles and testing senescent cells as a therapeutic target. However, the lack of specific and broadly applicable markers makes it difficult to identify and characterize senescent cells in tissues and living organisms. To address this, we provide practical guidelines called \u201cminimum information for cellular senescence experimentation in vivo\u201d (MICSE). It presents an overview of senescence markers in rodent tissues, transgenic models, non-mammalian systems, human tissues, and tumors and their use in the identification and specification of senescent cells. These guidelines provide a uniform, state-of-the-art, and accessible toolset to improve our understanding of cellular senescence in vivo.
Zhang L., Elkahal J., Wang T., Rimmer R., Genzelinakh A., Bassat E., Wang J., Perez D., Kain D., Lendengolts D., Winkler R., Bueno-levy H., Umansky K. B., Mishaly D., Shakked A., Miyara S., Sarusi-Portuguez A., Goldfinger N., Prior A., Morgenstern D., Levin Y., Addadi Y., Li B., Rotter V., Katz U., Tanaka E. M., Krizhanovsky V., Sarig R. & Tzahor E.
(2024)
Nature Cardiovascular Research.
3,
8,
p. 915-932
Senescence plays a key role in various physiological and pathological processes. We reported that injury-induced transient senescence correlates with heart regeneration, yet the multi-omics profile and molecular underpinnings of regenerative senescence remain obscure. Using proteomics and single-cell RNA sequencing, here we report the regenerative senescence multi-omic signature in the adult mouse heart and establish its role in neonatal heart regeneration and agrin-mediated cardiac repair in adult mice. We identified early growth response protein 1 (Egr1) as a regulator of regenerative senescence in both models. In the neonatal heart, Egr1 facilitates angiogenesis and cardiomyocyte proliferation. In adult hearts, agrin-induced senescence and repair require Egr1, activated by the integrinFAKERKAkt1 axis in cardiac fibroblasts. We also identified cathepsins as injury-induced senescence-associated secretory phenotype components that promote extracellular matrix degradation and potentially assist in reducing fibrosis. Altogether, we uncovered the molecular signature and functional benefits of regenerative senescence during heart regeneration, with Egr1 orchestrating the process.
Majewska J., Agrawal A., Mayo A., Roitman L., Chatterjee R., Sekeresova Kralova J., Landsberger T., Katzenelenbogen Y., Meir-Salame T., Hagai E., Sopher I., Perez-Correa J. F., Wagner W., Maimon A., Amit I., Alon U. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2024)
Nature Cell Biology.
26,
8,
p. 1336-1345
The accumulation of senescent cells promotes ageing and age-related diseases, but molecular mechanisms that senescent cells use to evade immune clearance and accumulate in tissues remain to be elucidated. Here we report that p16-positive senescent cells upregulate the immune checkpoint protein programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) to accumulate in ageing and chronic inflammation. We show that p16-mediated inhibition of cell cycle kinases CDK4/6 induces PD-L1 stability in senescent cells via downregulation of its ubiquitin-dependent degradation. p16-expressing senescent alveolar macrophages elevate PD-L1 to promote an immunosuppressive environment that can contribute to an increased burden of senescent cells. Treatment with activating anti-PD-L1 antibodies engaging Fcγ receptors on effector cells leads to the elimination of PD-L1 and p16-positive cells. Our study uncovers a molecular mechanism of p16-dependent regulation of PD-L1 protein stability in senescent cells and reveals the potential of targeting PD-L1 to improve immunosurveillance of senescent cells and ameliorate senescence-associated inflammation.
Rachmian N., Medina S., Cherqui U., Akiva H., Deitch D., Edilbi D., Croese T., Salame T. M., Ramos J. M. P., Cahalon L., Krizhanovsky V. & Schwartz M.
(2024)
Nature Neuroscience.
27,
6,
p. 1116-1124
Alzheimers disease (AD) and dementia in general are age-related diseases with multiple contributing factors, including brain inflammation. Microglia, and specifically those expressing the AD risk gene TREM2, are considered important players in AD, but their exact contribution to pathology remains unclear. In this study, using high-throughput mass cytometry in the 5×FAD mouse model of amyloidosis, we identified senescent microglia that express high levels of TREM2 but also exhibit a distinct signature from TREM2-dependent disease-associated microglia (DAM). This senescent microglial protein signature was found in various mouse models that show cognitive decline, including aging, amyloidosis and tauopathy. TREM2-null mice had fewer microglia with a senescent signature. Treating 5×FAD mice with the senolytic BCL2 family inhibitor ABT-737 reduced senescent microglia, but not the DAM population, and this was accompanied by improved cognition and reduced brain inflammation. Our results suggest a dual and opposite involvement of TREM2 in microglial states, which must be considered when contemplating TREM2 as a therapeutic target in AD.
Pancreatic adenocarcinomas (PDAC) often possess mutations in K-Ras that stimulate the ERK pathway. Aberrantly high ERK activation triggers oncogene-induced senescence, which halts tumor progression. Here we report that low-grade pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia displays very high levels of phospho-ERK consistent with a senescence response. However, advanced lesions that have circumvented the senescence barrier exhibit lower phospho-ERK levels. Restoring ERK hyperactivation in PDAC using activated RAF leads to ERK-dependent growth arrest with senescence biomarkers. ERK-dependent senescence in PDAC was characterized by a nucleolar stress response including a selective depletion of nucleolar phosphoproteins and intranucleolar foci containing RNA polymerase I designated as senescence-associated nucleolar foci (SANF). Accordingly, combining ribosome biogenesis inhibitors with ERK hyperactivation reinforced the senescence response in PDAC cells. Notably, comparable mechanisms were observed upon treatment with the platinum-based chemotherapy regimen FOLFIRINOX, currently a first-line treatment option for PDAC. We thus suggest that drugs targeting ribosome biogenesis can improve the senescence anticancer response in pancreatic cancer.
Levi N., Papismadov N., Majewska J., Roitman L., Wigoda N., Eilam R., Tsoory M., Rotkopf R., Ovadya Y., Akiva H., Regev O. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2023)
Aging (Albany, NY.).
15,
7,
p. 2395-2417
Cellular senescence is a stable state of cell cycle arrest that regulates tissue integrity and protects the organism from tumorigenesis. However, the accumulation of senescent cells during aging contributes to age-related pathologies. One such pathology is chronic lung inflammation. p21 (CDKN1A) regulates cellular senescence via inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). However, its role in chronic lung inflammation and functional impact on chronic lung disease, where senescent cells accumulate, is less understood. To elucidate the role of p21 in chronic lung inflammation, we subjected p21 knockout (p21-/-) mice to repetitive inhalations of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), an exposure that leads to chronic bronchitis and accumulation of senescent cells. p21 knockout led to a reduced presence of senescent cells, alleviated the pathological manifestations of chronic lung inflammation, and improved the fitness of the mice. The expression profiling of the lung cells revealed that resident epithelial and endothelial cells, but not immune cells, play a significant role in mediating the p21-dependent inflammatory response following chronic LPS exposure. Our results implicate p21 as a critical regulator of chronic bronchitis and a driver of chronic airway inflammation and lung destruction.
Cellular senescence, a stable form of cell cycle arrest, accompanied by pronounced secretory activity, has functional roles in both physiological and pathological conditions. Although senescence has been linked for a long time with cancer and ageing, recent studies have revealed a functional role of senescence in development, regeneration and reprogramming. Notably, the transient presence of senescent cells may be beneficial, in contrast to the potential deleterious effects of persistent senescence in aged or chronically damaged tissues. We will discuss how senescence contributes to embryonic development, cell plasticity and tissue regeneration, as a highly coordinated and programmed cellular state.
Rachmian N. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2022)
The FEBS journal.
290,
5,
p. 1256-1266
Cellular senescence is a process in which cells change their characteristic phenotype in response to stress and enter a state of prolonged cell cycle arrest accompanied by a distinct secretory phenotype. Cellular senescence has both beneficial and detrimental outcomes. With age, senescent cells progressively accumulate in tissues and might be the bridge connecting ageing to many age-related pathologies. In recent years, evidence emerged supporting the accumulation of brain senescent cells during neurological disorders and ageing. Here, we will discuss the different brain cell populations that exhibit a senescent phenotype. Subsequently, we will explore several senolytic strategies which have been developed to eliminate senescent cells. Finally, we will examine their potential to directly eliminate these senescent brain cells.
Kolodkin-Gal D., Roitman L., Ovadya Y., Azazmeh N., Assouline B., Schlesinger Y., Kalifa R., Horwitz S., Khalatnik Y., Hochner-Ger A., Imam A., Demma J. A., Winter E., Benyamini H., Elgavish S., Khatib A. A., Meir K., Atlan K., Pikarsky E., Parnas O., Dor Y., Zamir G., Ben-Porath I. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2022)
Gut.
71,
2,
p. 345-355
Objective: Cellular senescence limits tumourigenesis by blocking the proliferation of premalignant cells. Additionally, however, senescent cells can exert paracrine effects influencing tumour growth. Senescent cells are present in premalignant pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN) lesions, yet their effects on the disease are poorly characterised. It is currently unknown whether senolytic drugs, aimed at eliminating senescent cells from lesions, could be beneficial in blocking tumour development. Design: To uncover the functions of senescent cells and their potential contribution to early pancreatic tumourigenesis, we isolated and characterised senescent cells from PanINs formed in a Kras-driven mouse model, and tested the consequences of their targeted elimination through senolytic treatment. Results: We found that senescent PanIN cells exert a tumour-promoting effect through expression of a proinflammatory signature that includes high Cox2 levels. Senolytic treatment with the Bcl2-family inhibitor ABT-737 eliminated Cox2-expressing senescent cells, and an intermittent short-duration treatment course dramatically reduced PanIN development and progression to pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. Conclusions: These findings reveal that senescent PanIN cells support tumour growth and progression, and provide a first indication that elimination of senescent cells may be effective as preventive therapy for the progression of precancerous lesions.
Cellular senescence, a highly coordinated and programmed cellular state, has a functional role in both lung physiology and pathology. While the contribution of senescent cells is recognized in the context of ageing and age-related pulmonary diseases, relatively less is known how cellular senescence of functionally distinct cell types leads to the progression of these pathologies. Recent advances in tools to track and isolate senescent cells from tissues, shed a light on the identity, behavior and function of senescent cells in vivo. The transient presence of senescent cells has an indispensable role in limiting lung damage and contributes to organ regenerative capacity upon acute stress insults. In contrast, persistent accumulation of senescent cells is a driver of age-related decline in organ function. Here, we discuss lung physiology and pathology as an example of seemingly contradictory role of senescence in structural and functional integrity of the tissue upon damage, and in age-related pulmonary diseases.
Shmulevich R. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2021)
Antioxidants & Redox Signaling.
34,
4,
p. 324-334
Significance: Senescence is an essential biological process that blocks tumorigenesis, limits tissue damage, and aids embryonic development. However, once senescent cells accumulate in tissues during aging, they promote the development of age-related diseases and limit health span. Thus, it is essential to expand the boundaries of our knowledge about the mechanisms responsible for controlling cellular senescence.Recent Advances: Cellular metabolism plays a significant role in the regulation of various signaling processes involved in cell senescence. In the past decade, our knowledge about the interplay between cell signaling, cell metabolism, and cellular senescence has significantly expanded.Critical Issues: In this study, we review metabolic pathways in senescent cells and the impact of these pathways on the response to DNA damage and the senescence-associated secretory phenotype.Future Directions: Future research should elucidate metabolic mechanisms that promote specific alterations in senescent cell phenotype, with a final goal of developing a new therapeutic strategy.
Cellular senescence, first described in vitro in 1961, has become a focus for biotech companies that target it to ameliorate a variety of human conditions. Eminently characterized by a permanent proliferation arrest, cellular senescence occurs in response to endogenous and exogenous stresses, including telomere dysfunction, oncogene activation and persistent DNA damage. Cellular senescence can also be a controlled programme occurring in diverse biological processes, including embryonic development. Senescent cell extrinsic activities, broadly related to the activation of a senescence-associated secretory phenotype, amplify the impact of cell-intrinsic proliferative arrest and contribute to impaired tissue regeneration, chronic age-associated diseases and organismal ageing. This Review discusses the mechanisms and modulators of cellular senescence establishment and induction of a senescence-associated secretory phenotype, and provides an overview of cellular senescence as an emerging opportunity to intervene through senolytic and senomorphic therapies in ageing and ageing-associated diseases.
Papismadov N. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2021)
Nature Neuroscience.
24,
1,
p. 2-4
One of the mechanisms driving aging and neurodegenerative diseases is the accumulation of senescent cells, while their elimination mitigates age-related decline. A new report details how, with aging, changes in the dentate gyrus microenvironment lead to natural-killer-cell-mediated clearance of neurogenic senescent cells, resulting in cognitive decline.
Kinker G. S., Greenwald A. C., Tal R., Orlova Z., Cuoco M. S., McFarland J. M., Warren A., Rodman C., Roth J. A., Bender S. A., Kumar B., Rocco J. W., Fernandes P. A., Mader C. C., Keren-Shaul H., Plotnikov A., Barr H., Tsherniak A., Rozenblatt-Rosen O., Krizhanovsky V., Puram S. V., Regev A. & Tirosh I.
(2020)
Nature Genetics.
52,
11,
p. 1208-1218
Cultured cell lines are the workhorse of cancer research, but the extent to which they recapitulate the heterogeneity observed among malignant cells in tumors is unclear. Here we used multiplexed single-cell RNA-seq to profile 198 cancer cell lines from 22 cancer types. We identified 12 expression programs that are recurrently heterogeneous within multiple cancer cell lines. These programs are associated with diverse biological processes, including cell cycle, senescence, stress and interferon responses, epithelialmesenchymal transition and protein metabolism. Most of these programs recapitulate those recently identified as heterogeneous within human tumors. We prioritized specific cell lines as models of cellular heterogeneity and used them to study subpopulations of senescence-related cells, demonstrating their dynamics, regulation and unique drug sensitivities, which were predictive of clinical response. Our work describes the landscape of heterogeneity within diverse cancer cell lines and identifies recurrent patterns of heterogeneity that are shared between tumors and specific cell lines.
Levi N., Papismadov N., Solomonov I., Sagi I. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2020)
The FEBS journal.
287,
13,
p. 2636-2646
The extracellular matrix (ECM) is a key non-cellular component in all organs and tissues. It is composed of a large number of proteins including collagens, glycoproteins (GP), and ECM-associated proteins, which show diversity of biochemical and biophysical functions. The ECM is dynamic both in normal physiology of tissues and under pathological conditions. One cellular phenomenon associated with changes in both ECM components expression and in ECM remodeling enzymes secretion is cellular senescence. It represents a stable state form of cell cycle arrest induced in proliferating cells by various forms of stress. Short-term induction of senescence is essential for tumor suppression and tissue repair. However, long-term presence of senescent cells in tissues may have a detrimental role in promoting tissue damage and aging. Up to date, there is insufficient knowledge about the interplay between the ECM and senescence cells. Since changes in the ECM occur in many physiological and pathological conditions in which senescent cells are present, a better understanding of ECM-senescence interactions is necessary. Here, we will review the functions of the different ECM components and will discuss the current knowledge about their regulation in senescent cells and their influence on the senescence state.
Karin O., Agrawal A., Porat Z., Krizhanovsky V. & Alon U.
(2019)
Nature Communications.
10,
5495.
A causal factor in mammalian aging is the accumulation of senescent cells (SnCs). SnCs cause chronic inflammation, and removing SnCs decelerates aging in mice. Despite their importance, turnover rates of SnCs are unknown, and their connection to aging dynamics is unclear. Here we use longitudinal SnC measurements and induction experiments to show that SnCs turn over rapidly in young mice, with a half-life of days, but slow their own removal rate to a half-life of weeks in old mice. This leads to a critical-slowing-down that generates persistent SnC fluctuations. We further demonstrate that a mathematical model, in which death occurs when fluctuating SnCs cross a threshold, quantitatively recapitulates the Gompertz law of mortality in mice and humans. The model can go beyond SnCs to explain the effects of lifespan-modulating interventions in Drosophila and C. elegans, including scaling of survival-curves and rapid effects of dietary shifts on mortality.
Gorgoulis V., Adams P. D., Alimonti A., Bennett D. C., Bischof O., Bishop C., Campisi J., Collado M., Evangelou K., Ferbeyre G., Gil J., Hara E., Krizhanovsky V., Jurk D., Maier A. B., Narita M., Niedernhofer L., Passos J. F., Robbins P. D., Schmitt C. A., Sedivy J., Vougas K., von Zglinicki T., Zhou D., Serrano M. & Demaria M.
(2019)
Cell.
179,
4,
p. 813-827
Cellular senescence is a cell state implicated in various physiological processes and a wide spectrum of age-related diseases. Recently, interest in therapeutically targeting senescence to improve healthy aging and age-related disease, otherwise known as senotherapy, has been growing rapidly. Thus, the accurate detection of senescent cells, especially in vivo, is essential. Here, we present a consensus from the International Cell Senescence Association (ICSA), defining and discussing key cellular and molecular features of senescence and offering recommendations on how to use them as biomarkers. We also present a resource tool to facilitate the identification of genes linked with senescence, SeneQuest (available at http://Senequest.net). Lastly, we propose an algorithm to accurately assess and quantify senescence, both in cultured cells and in vivo.
Gal H., Lysenko M., Stroganov S., Vadai E., Youssef S. A., Tzadikevitch-Geffen K., Rotkopf R., Biron-Shental T., de Bruin A., Neeman M. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2019)
EMBO Journal.
38,
18,
100849.
The placenta is an autonomous organ that maintains fetal growth and development. Its multinucleated syncytiotrophoblast layer, providing fetal nourishment during gestation, exhibits characteristics of cellular senescence. We show that in human placentas from pregnancies with intrauterine growth restriction, these characteristics are decreased. To elucidate the functions of pathways regulating senescence in syncytiotrophoblast, we used dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI in mice with attenuated senescence programs. This approach revealed an altered dynamics in placentas of p53(-/-), Cdkn2a(-/-), and Cdkn2a(-/-);p53(-/-) mice, accompanied by histopathological changes in placental labyrinths. Human primary syncytiotrophoblast upregulated senescence markers and molecular pathways associated with cell-cycle inhibition and senescence-associated secretory phenotype. The pathways and components of the secretory phenotype were compromised in mouse placentas with attenuated senescence and in human placentas from pregnancies with intrauterine growth restriction. We propose that molecular mediators of senescence regulate placental structure and function, through both cell-autonomous and non-autonomous mechanisms.
Farladansky-Gershnabel S., Gal H., Kidron D., Krizhanovsky V., Amiel A., Sukenik-Halevy R. & Biron-Shental T.
(2019)
Reproductive Sciences.
26,
9,
p. 1203-1209
Farack L., Golan M., Egozi A., Dezorella N., Halpern K. B., Ben-Moshe S., Garzilli I., Toth B., Roitman L., Krizhanovsky V. & Itzkovitz S.
(2019)
Developmental Cell.
48,
1,
p. 115-125
Pancreatic beta cells have been shown to be heterogeneous at multiple levels. However, spatially interrogating transcriptional heterogeneity in the intact tissue has been challenging. Here, we developed an optimized protocol for single-molecule transcript imaging in the intact pancreas and used it to identify a sub-population of "extreme'' beta cells with elevated mRNA levels of insulin and other secretory genes. Extreme beta cells contain higher ribosomal and proinsulin content but lower levels of insulin protein in fasted states, suggesting they may be tuned for basal insulin secretion. They exhibit a distinctive intra-cellular polarization pattern, with elevated mRNA concentrations in an apical ER-enriched compartment, distinct from the localization of nascent and mature proteins. The proportion of extreme cells increases in db/db diabetic mice, potentially facilitating the required increase in basal insulin. Our results thus highlight a sub-population of beta cells that may carry distinct functional roles along physiological and pathological timescales.
Ovadya Y., Landsberger T., Leins H., Vadai E., Gal H., Biran A., Yosef R., Sagiv A., Agrawal A., Shapira A., Windheim J., Tsoory M., Schirmbeck R., Amit I., Geiger H. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2018)
Nature Communications.
9,
1,
5435.
Cellular senescence is a stress response that imposes stable cell-cycle arrest in damaged cells, preventing their propagation in tissues. However, senescent cells accumulate in tissues in advanced age, where they might promote tissue degeneration and malignant transformation. The extent of immune-system involvement in regulating age-related accumulation of senescent cells, and its consequences, are unknown. Here we show that Prf1(-/-) mice with impaired cell cytotoxicity exhibit both higher senescent-cell tissue burden and chronic inflammation. They suffer from multiple age-related disorders and lower survival. Strikingly, pharmacological elimination of senescent-cells by ABT-737 partially alleviates accelerated aging phenotype in these mice. In LMNA(+/G609G) progeroid mice, impaired cell cytotoxicity further promotes senescent-cell accumulation and shortens lifespan. ABT-737 administration during the second half of life of these progeroid mice abrogates senescence signature and increases median survival. Our findings shed new light on mechanisms governing senescentcell presence in aging, and could motivate new strategies for regenerative medicine.
Gal H., Porat Z. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2018)
Cellular Senescence
.
Demaria M.(eds.).
Vol. 1896.
p. 107-117
Cellular senescence is a permanent growth arrest mechanism triggered by various forms of stress. Senescent cells accumulate in the mammalian organism with age and are present at sites of tissue damage and age related pathologies. However, the characterization of senescence cells in vivo is currently limited and the need for new technologies to detect and monitor the senescence state in vivo has greatly increased. Here we demonstrate the use of the ImageStreamX as a powerful method for detection and quantification of senescent cells at distinct tissues and cell subpopulations. The identification of senescent cells using ImageStreamX enables the use of a combination of several senescence-related markers, together with the commonly used senescence-associated beta-galactosidase assay. These can be combined with the use of other molecular features typical of senescence cells, such as the γH2AX foci, indicating the activation of DNA damage response. This novel method offers a feasible solution to quantify senescent cells in vivo, in a comprehensive manner. Such quantification is necessary in order to understand the role of cellular senescence in aging and disease.
Biran A., Porat Z. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2018)
Cancer Immunosurveillance
: Methods and Protocols
.
López-Soto A. & R. Folgueras A.(eds.).
p. 259-267
Cellular senescence, a state of permanent growth arrest, is an important mechanism preventing the propagation of damaged cells. It suppresses cancer development in premalignant lesions in response to activated oncogenes and in tumors following therapy. The presence of senescent cells in premalignant lesions and tumors is controlled by the immune system. The ability to identify and quantify senescent cells more efficiently in vivo is necessary in order to evaluate the effect of these cells on tumorigenesis and cancer therapy. Through combining senescent-associated beta-galactosidase staining with ImageStream X analysis, we have developed an effective method to identify and quantify senescent cancer cells in vivo.
Geffen K. T., Gal H., Vainer I., Markovitch O., Amiel A., Krizhanovsky V. & Biron-Shental T.
(2018)
Reproductive Sciences.
25,
8,
p. 1254-1260
Objective: Placenta percreta (PP) is an abnormal condition of trophoblast maturation and terminal differentiation through the uterine wall. We opted to study telomere homeostasis and senescence expression in trophoblasts from PP, the most severe subgroup of placenta accreta.Study Design: Paraffin-embedded placental biopsies from pregnancies with percreta and normal placentation, matched by gestational age at delivery, were assessed for telomere length, aggregates, and senescence-associated heterochromatin foci using quantitative fluorescence in situ hybridization. Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p21, p15, p16, and the tumor suppressor protein p53, known senescence-related markers, were assessed using immunohistochemical staining.Results: Short telomeres were found more often in trophoblasts from the samples of PP (n = 9) compared to controls (n = 8; 54% 20% vs 2.3% +/- 1.16%, respectively; P
Ovadya Y. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2018)
Journal of Clinical Investigation.
128,
4,
p. 1247-1254
Cellular senescence is a physiological phenomenon that has both beneficial and detrimental consequences. Senescence limits tumorigenesis and tissue damage throughout the lifetime. However, at the late stages of life, senescent cells increasingly accumulate in tissues and might also contribute to the development of various age-related pathologies. Recent studies have revealed the molecular pathways that preserve the viability of senescent cells and the ones regulating their immune surveillance. These studies provide essential initial insights for the development of novel therapeutic strategies for targeting senescent cells. At the same time they stress the need to understand the limitations of the existing strategies, their efficacy and safety, and the possible deleterious consequences of senescent cell elimination. Here we discuss the existing strategies for targeting senescent cells and upcoming challenges in translating these strategies into safe and efficient therapies. Successful translation of these strategies could have implications for treating a variety of diseases at old age and could potentially reshape our view of health management during aging.
Sagiv A., Bar-Shai A., Levi N., Hatzav M., Zada L., Ovadya Y., Roitman L., Manella G., Regev O., Majewska J., Vadai E., Eilam R., Feigelson S. W., Tsoory M., Tauc M., Alon R. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2018)
Cell Reports.
22,
13,
p. 3468-3479
The tumor suppressor p53 limits tumorigenesis by inducing apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, and senescence. Although p53 is known to limit inflammation during tumor development, its role in regulating chronic lung inflammation is less well understood. To elucidate the function of airway epithelial p53 in such inflammation, we subjected genetically modified mice, whose bronchial epithelial club cells lack p53, to repetitive inhalations of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), an exposure that leads to severe chronic bronchitis and airway senescence in wild-type mice. Surprisingly, the club cell p53 knockout mice exhibited reduced airway senescence and bronchitis in response to chronic LPS exposure and were significantly protected from global lung destruction. Furthermore, pharmacological elimination of senescent cells also protected wild-type mice from chronic LPS-induced bronchitis. Our results implicate p53 in induction of club-cell senescence and correlate epithelial cell senescence of chronic airway inflammation and lung destruction. Sagiv et al. find that senescence and p53 in bronchial epithelial cells promote chronic lung inflammation and COPD-like disease. Genetic or pharmacological reduction in senescent cell number blunts chronic inflammation and limits disease progression.
Mancini M., Gal H., Gaborit N., Mazzeo L., Romaniello D., Salame T. M., Lindzen M., Mahlknecht G., Enuka Y., Burton D. G. A., Roth L., Noronha A., Marrocco I., Adreka D., Altstadter R. E., Bousquet E., Downward J., Maraver A., Krizhanovsky V. & Yarden Y.
(2018)
EMBO Molecular Medicine.
10,
2,
p. 294-308
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutations identify patients with lung cancer who derive benefit from kinase inhibitors. However, most patients eventually develop resistance, primarily due to the T790M second-site mutation. Irreversible inhibitors (e.g., osimertinib/AZD9291) inhibit T790M-EGFR, but several mechanisms, including a third-site mutation, C797S, confer renewed resistance. We previously reported that a triple mixture of monoclonal antibodies, 3xmAbs, simultaneously targeting EGFR, HER2, and HER3, inhibits T790M-expressing tumors. We now report that 3xmAbs, including a triplet containing cetuximab and trastuzumab, inhibits C797S-expressing tumors. Unlike osimertinib, which induces apoptosis, 3xmAbs promotes degradation of the three receptors and induces cellular senescence. Consistent with distinct mechanisms, treatments combining 3xmAbs plus sub-inhibitory doses of osimertinib synergistically and persistently eliminated tumors. Thus, oligoclonal antibodies, either alone or in combination with kinase inhibitors, might preempt repeated cycles of treatment and rapid emergence of resistance.
Yosef R., Pilpel N., Papismadov N., Gal H., Ovadya Y., Vadai E., Miller S., Porat Z., Ben-Dor S. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2017)
EMBO Journal.
36,
15,
p. 2280-2295
Cellular senescence is a permanent state of cell cycle arrest that protects the organism from tumorigenesis and regulates tissue integrity upon damage and during tissue remodeling. However, accumulation of senescent cells in tissues during aging contributes to age-related pathologies. A deeper understanding of the mechanisms regulating the viability of senescent cells is therefore required. Here, we show that the CDK inhibitor p21 (CDKN1A) maintains the viability of DNA damage-induced senescent cells. Upon p21 knockdown, senescent cells acquired multiple DNA lesions that activated ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) and nuclear factor (NF)-κB kinase, leading to decreased cell survival. NF-κB activation induced TNF-α secretion and JNK activation to mediate death of senescent cells in a caspase- and JNK-dependent manner. Notably, p21 knockout in mice eliminated liver senescent stellate cells and alleviated liver fibrosis and collagen production. These findings define a novel pathway that regulates senescent cell viability and fibrosis.
Biran A., Zada L., Abou Karam K. P., Vadai E., Roitman L., Ovadya Y., Porat Z. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2017)
Aging Cell.
16,
4,
p. 661-671
Senescent cells are present in premalignant lesions and sites of tissue damage and accumulate in tissues with age. In vivo identification, quantification and characterization of senescent cells are challenging tasks that limit our understanding of the role of senescent cells in diseases and aging. Here, we present a new way to precisely quantify and identify senescent cells in tissues on a single-cell basis. The method combines a senescence-associated beta-galactosidase assay with staining of molecular markers for cellular senescence and of cellular identity. By utilizing technology that combines flow cytometry with high-content image analysis, we were able to quantify senescent cells in tumors, fibrotic tissues, and tissues of aged mice. Our approach also yielded the finding that senescent cells in tissues of aged mice are larger than nonsenescent cells. Thus, this method provides a basis for quantitative assessment of senescent cells and it offers proof of principle for combination of different markers of senescence. It paves the way for screening of senescent cells for identification of new senescence biomarkers, genes that bypass senescence or senolytic compounds that eliminate senescent cells, thus enabling a deeper understanding of the senescent state in vivo.
Yosef R., Pilpel N., Tokarsky-Amiel R., Biran A., Ovadya Y., Cohen S., Vadai E., Dassa L., Shahar E., Condiotti R., Ben-Porath I. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2016)
Nature Communications.
7,
11190.
Senescent cells, formed in response to physiological and oncogenic stresses, facilitate protection from tumourigenesis and aid in tissue repair. However, accumulation of such cells in tissues contributes to age-related pathologies. Resistance of senescent cells to apoptotic stimuli may contribute to their accumulation, yet the molecular mechanisms allowing their prolonged viability are poorly characterized. Here we show that senescent cells upregulate the anti-apoptotic proteins BCL-W and BCL-XL. Joint inhibition of BCL-W and BCL-XL by siRNAs or the small-molecule ABT-737 specifically induces apoptosis in senescent cells. Notably, treatment of mice with ABT-737 efficiently eliminates senescent cells induced by DNA damage in the lungs as well as senescent cells formed in the epidermis by activation of p53 through transgenic p14ARF. Elimination of senescent cells from the epidermis leads to an increase in hair-follicle stem cell proliferation. The finding that senescent cells can be eliminated pharmacologically paves the way to new strategies for the treatment of age-related pathologies.
Sagiv A., Burton D., Moshayev Z., Vadai E., Wensveen F., Ben-Dor S., Golani O., Polic B. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2016)
AGING-US.
8,
2,
p. 328-344
Cellular senescence is a stress response mechanism that limits tumorigenesis and tissue damage. Induction of cellular senescence commonly coincides with an immunogenic phenotype that promotes self-elimination by components of the immune system, thereby facilitating tumor suppression and limiting excess fibrosis during wound repair. The mechanisms by which senescent cells regulate their immune surveillance are not completely understood. Here we show that ligands of an activating Natural Killer (NK) cell receptor (NKG2D), MICA and ULBP2 are consistently up-regulated following induction of replicative senescence, oncogene-induced senescence and DNA damage - induced senescence. MICA and ULBP2 proteins are necessary for efficient NK-mediated cytotoxicity towards senescent fibroblasts. The mechanisms regulating the initial expression of NKG2D ligands in senescent cells are dependent on a DNA damage response, whilst continuous expression of these ligands is regulated by the ERK signaling pathway. In liver fibrosis, the accumulation of senescent activated stellate cells is increased in mice lacking NKG2D receptor leading to increased fibrosis. Overall, our results provide new insights into the mechanisms regulating the expression of immune ligands in senescent cells and reveal the importance of NKG2D receptor-ligand interaction in protecting against liver fibrosis.
Golomb L., Sagiv A., Pateras I., Maly A., Krizhanovsky V., Gorgoulis V., Oren M. & Ben-Yehuda A.
(2015)
Cell Death and Differentiation.
22,
11,
p. 1764-1774
Aging is the single biggest risk factor for malignant transformation. Among the most common age-associated malignancies are non-melanoma skin cancers, comprising the most common types of human cancer. Here we show that mutant H-Ras activation in mouse epidermis, a frequent event in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), elicits a differential outcome in aged versus young mice. Whereas H-Ras activation in the young skin results in hyperplasia that is mainly accompanied by rapid hair growth, H-Ras activation in the aged skin results in more dysplasia and gradual progression to in situ SCC. Progression is associated with increased inflammation, pronounced accumulation of immune cells including T cells, macrophages and mast cells as well as excessive cell senescence. We found not only an age-dependent increase in expression of several pro-inflammatory mediators, but also activation of a strong anti-inflammatory response involving enhanced IL4/IL10 expression and immune skewing toward a Th2 response. In addition, we observed an age-dependent increase in the expression of Pdl1, encoding an immune suppressive ligand that promotes cancer immune evasion. Moreover, upon switching off oncogenic H-Ras activity, young but not aged skin regenerates successfully, suggesting a failure of the aged epidermal stem cells to repair damaged tissue. Our findings support an age-dependent link between accumulation of senescent cells, immune infiltration and cancer progression, which may contribute to the increased cancer risk associated with old age.
Ovadya Y. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2015)
Nature Medicine.
21,
9,
p. 975-977
Kidney fibrosis is a main pathological component of chronic kidney disease. Two new studies pinpoint a partial epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition as a mechanism driving the development of kidney fibrosis, thus paving the way for novel treatments of fibrosis-associated diseases.
George B., Horn D., Bayo P., Zaoui K., Flechtenmacher C., Grabe N., Plinkert P., Krizhanovsky V. & Hess J.
(2015)
Cancer Letters.
358,
2,
p. 191-199
Myb-binding protein 1A (MYBBP1A) is a nucleolar protein implicated in stress response and carcinogenesis; however, its functional contribution to senescence remains elusive. In this study we show decreased MYBBP1A protein levels in tumor cells after treatment with etoposide, a potent inducer of DNA damage. Although silencing of MYBBP1A expression was not sufficient to induce senescence, it significantly increased the relative abundance of senescent cells after DNA damage. We found an inverse regulation of MYBBP1A and AKT phosphorylation (pAKT(Ser473)), which was characteristic for the pre-senescent state after etoposide administration in vitro. Tissue microarrays with tumor specimens from primary oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) patients (n = 61) by immunohistochemistry revealed a significant correlation between MYBBP1AlowpAKT(Ser473)high staining pattern and shorter progression-free (p = 0.007) or overall survival (p < 0.001). Multivariate analysis showed that MYBBP1AlowpAKT(Ser473)high staining pattern is an independent prognosticator for OPSCC. Taken together, our study points to a critical role of MYBBP1A in the regulation of senescence under genotoxic stress and that a MYBBP1AlowAKT(Ser473)high staining pattern serves not only as a marker for the pre-senescent stage but also as an indicator of OPSCC patients at high risk for treatment failure.
Ovadya Y. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2014)
Biogerontology.
15,
6,
p. 627-642
The progression of physiological ageing is driven by intracellular aberrations including telomere attrition, genomic instability, epigenetic alterations and loss of proteostasis. These in turn damage cells and compromise their functionality. Cellular senescence, a stable irreversible cell-cycle arrest, is elicited in damaged cells and prevents their propagation in the organism. Under normal conditions, senescent cells recruit the immune system which facilitates their removal from tissues. Nevertheless, during ageing, tissue-residing senescent cells tend to accumulate, and might negatively impact their microenvironment via profound secretory phenotype with pro-inflammatory characteristics, termed senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). Indeed, senescent cells are mostly abundant at sites of age-related pathologies, including degenerative disorders and malignancies. Interestingly, studies on progeroid mice indicate that selective elimination of senescent cells can delay age-related deterioration. This suggests that chronic inflammation induced by senescent cells might be a main driver of these pathologies. Importantly, senescent cells accumulate as a result of deficient immune surveillance, and their removal is increased upon the use of immune stimulatory agents. Insights into mechanisms of senescence surveillance could be combined with current approaches for cancer immunotherapy to propose new preventive and therapeutic strategies for age-related diseases.
Burton D. G. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2014)
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences.
71,
22,
p. 4373-4386
Cellular senescence, a permanent state of cell cycle arrest accompanied by a complex phenotype, is an essential mechanism that limits tumorigenesis and tissue damage. In physiological conditions, senescent cells can be removed by the immune system, facilitating tumor suppression and wound healing. However, as we age, senescent cells accumulate in tissues, either because an aging immune system fails to remove them, the rate of senescent cell formation is elevated, or both. If senescent cells persist in tissues, they have the potential to paradoxically promote pathological conditions. Cellular senescence is associated with an enhanced pro-survival phenotype, which most likely promotes persistence of senescent cells in vivo. This phenotype may have evolved to favor facilitation of a short-term wound healing, followed by the elimination of senescent cells by the immune system. In this review, we provide a perspective on the triggers, mechanisms and physiological as well as pathological consequences of senescent cells.
The role of Clara cell senescence in the pathogenesis of COPD
Bar-Shai A., Sagiv A., Alon R. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2014)
European Respiratory Journal.
44,
Biran A., Perelmutter M., Gal H., Burton D. G. A., Ovadya Y., Vadai E., Geiger T. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2014)
Genes and Development.
29,
8,
p. 791-802
Mammalian cells mostly rely on extracellular molecules to transfer signals to other cells. However, in stress conditions, more robust mechanisms might be necessary to facilitate cellcell communications. Cellular senescence, a stress response associated with permanent exit from the cell cycle and the development of an immunogenic phenotype, limits both tumorigenesis and tissue damage. Paradoxically, the long-term presence of senescent cells can promote tissue damage and aging within their microenvironment. Soluble factors secreted from senescent cells mediate some of these cell-nonautonomous effects. However, it is unknown whether senescent cells impact neighboring cells by other mechanisms. Here we show that senescent cells directly transfer proteins to neighboring cells and that this process facilitates immune surveillance of senescent cells by natural killer (NK) cells. We found that transfer of proteins to NK and T cells is increased in the murine preneoplastic pancreas, a site where senescent cells are present in vivo. Proteomic analysis and functional studies of the transferred proteins revealed that the transfer is strictly dependent on cellcell contact and CDC42-regulated actin polymerization and is mediated at least partially by cytoplasmic bridges. These findings reveal a novel mode of intercellular communication by which senescent cells regulate their immune surveillance and might impact tumorigenesis and tissue aging.
Abu-Tair L., Axelrod J. H., Doron S., Ovadya Y., Krizhanovsky V., Galun E., Amer J. & Safadi R.
(2013)
PLoS ONE.
8,
12,
e82571.
The toll-like receptor-9 (TLR9) agonist cytosine phosphate guanine (CpG), activates hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) and mediates fibrosis. We investigated the TLR9 effects on lymphocyte/HSCs interactions. Liver fibrosis was induced in wild-type (WT) mice by intra-peritoneal carbon-tetrachloride (CCI4) induction for 6 weeks. Fibrotic groups were intravenously treated by a vehicle versus CpG along last 2 weeks. Compared to vehicle-treated fibrotic WT, the invivo CpG-treatment significantly attenuated hepatic fibrosis and inflammation, associated with decreased CD8 and increased NK liver cells. In-vitro, co-cultures with vehicle-treated fibrotic NK cells increased HSCs proliferation (P
Sagiv A. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2013)
Biogerontology.
14,
6,
p. 617-628
Cellular senescence, a state of irreversible cell cycle arrest, is a robust mechanism used to mediate tumor suppression and control the tissue damage response following short-term insults. In addition, the senescence associated-secretory phenotype (SASP), one of the most profound characteristics of the senescence program, facilitates the immunosurveillance of senescent cells. The SASP includes many chemokines, cytokines and adhesion molecules that can recruit and activate distinct immune cells from both the innate and adaptive immune system such as NK cells, monocytes/macrophages and T cells. Furthermore, senescent cells can upregulate specific immune ligands on their cell surface that can mediate the recognition of these cells by specific immune cell subsets and lead to activation of the immune cells. Consequently, the activated immune cells engage explicit regulatory mechanisms to eliminate senescent cells. For example, recent work from our laboratory showed that perforin-granzyme exocytosis mediates NK-cell killing of senescent cells. Here, we summarize the current advances in our knowledge of the mechanisms underlying specific immune-mediated elimination of senescent cells.
Storer M., Mas A., Robert-Moreno A., Pecoraro M., Ortells M. C., Di Giacomo V., Yosef R., Pilpel N., Krizhanovsky V., Sharpe J. & Keyes W. M.
(2013)
Cell.
155,
5,
p. 1119
Senescence is a form of cell-cycle arrest linked to tumor suppression and aging. However, it remains controversial and has not been documented in nonpathologic states. Here we describe senescence as a normal developmental mechanism found throughout the embryo, including the apical ectodermal ridge (AER) and the neural roof plate, two signaling centers in embryonic patterning. Embryonic senescent cells are nonproliferative and share features with oncogene-induced senescence (OIS), including expression of p21, p15, and mediators of the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). Interestingly, mice deficient in p21 have defects in embryonic senescence, AER maintenance, and patterning. Surprisingly, the underlying mesenchyme was identified as a source for senescence instruction in the AER, whereas the ultimate fate of these senescent cells is apoptosis and macrophage-mediated clearance. We propose that senescence is a normal programmed mechanism that plays instructive roles in development, and that OIS is an evolutionarily adapted reactivation of a developmental process.
Chuprin A., Gal H., Biron-Shental T., Biran A., Amiel A., Rozenblatt S. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2013)
GENES & DEVELOPMENT.
27,
21,
p. 2356-2366
Cellular senescence limits proliferation of potentially detrimental cells, preventing tumorigenesis and restricting tissue damage. However, the function of senescence in nonpathological conditions is unknown. We found that the human placental syncytiotrophoblast exhibited the phenotype and expressed molecular markers of cellular senescence. During embryonic development, ERVWE1-mediated cell fusion results in formation of the syncytiotrophoblast, which serves as the maternal/fetal interface at the placenta. Expression of ERVWE1 caused cell fusion in normal and cancer cells, leading to formation of hyperploid syncytia exhibiting features of cellular senescence. Infection by the measles virus, which leads to cell fusion, also induced cellular senescence in normal and cancer cells. The fused cells activated the main molecular pathways of senescence, the p53- and p16-pRbdependent pathways; the senescence-associated secretory phenotype; and immune surveillance-related proteins. Thus, fusion-induced senescence might be needed for proper syncytiotrophoblast function during embryonic development, and reuse of this senescence program later in life protects against pathological expression of endogenous fusogens and fusogenic viral infections.
Lujambio A., Akkari L., Simon J., Grace D., Tschaharganeh D. F., Bolden J. E., Zhao Z., Thapar V., Joyce J. A., Krizhanovsky V. & Lowe S. W.
(2013)
Cell.
153,
2,
p. 449-460
The p53 tumor suppressor can restrict malignant transformation by triggering cell-autonomous programs of cell-cycle arrest or apoptosis. p53 also promotes cellular senescence, a tumor-suppressive program that involves stable cell-cycle arrest and secretion of factors that modify the tissue microenvironment. In the presence of chronic liver damage, we show that ablation of a p53-dependent senescence program in hepatic stellate cells increases liver fibrosis and cirrhosis associated with reduced survival and enhances the transformation of adjacent epithelial cells into hepatocellular carcinoma. p53-expressing senescent stellate cells release factors that skew macrophage polarization toward a tumor-inhibiting M1-state capable of attacking senescent cells in culture, whereas proliferating p53-deficient stellate cells secrete factors that stimulate polarization of macrophages into a tumor-promoting M2-state and enhance the proliferation of premalignant cells. Hence, p53 can act non-cell autonomously to suppress tumorigenesis by promoting an antitumor microenvironment, in part, through secreted factors that modulate macrophage function.
Sagiv A., Biran A., Yon M., Simon J., Lowe S. W. & Krizhanovsky V.
(2013)
Oncogene.
32,
15,
p. 1971-1977
Senescence is a stable cell cycle arrest program that contributes to tumor suppression, organismal aging and certain wound healing responses. During liver fibrosis, for example, hepatic stellate cells initially proliferate and secrete extracellular matrix components that produce fibrosis; however, these cells eventually senesce and are cleared by immune cells, including natural killer (NK) cells. Here, we examine how NK cells target senescent cells and assess the impact of this process on liver fibrosis. We show that granule exocytosis, but not death-receptor-mediated apoptosis, is required for NK-cell-mediated killing of senescent cells. This pathway bias is due to upregulation of the decoy death receptor, Dcr2, an established senescence marker that attenuates NK-mediated cell death. Accordingly, mice with defects in granule exocytosis accumulate senescent stellate cells and display more liver fibrosis in response to a fibrogenic agent. Our results thus provide new insights into the immune surveillance of senescent cells and reveal how granule exocytosis has a protective role against liver fibrosis.
Krizhanovsky V.
(2013)
Tumor Dormancy, Quiescence, and Senescence
: Aging, Cancer, and Noncancer Pathologies
.
Hayat M. A.(eds.).
Vol. 1.
p. 291-301
Cellular senescence is emerging as a mechanism that limits tissue damage. In most tissues of the body, following short-term damage this response aims to ensure the return to the predamaged state. This novel physiological role of cellular senescence is additional to its wellestablished function as a tumor suppressor. In a mouse model of liver fibrosis, cellular senescence limits fibrosis progression by several mechanisms. Cell cycle arrest limits expansion of activated hepatic stellate cells, senescent cells produce less extracellular matrix and more enzymes that degrade it, and the immune system speci fically recognizes and eliminates senescent cells, returning the liver tissue to its normal state. The mechanisms responsible for interaction with the immune system are part of the senescence phenotype and are needed to prevent the long-term destructive effects of senescent cells. Initially cellular senescence is bene ficial, as it limits tumorigenesis and tissue damage, but when senescent cells persist in tissues they contribute to tissue ageing and potentially promote tumorigenesis in their microenvironments. The coordinated molecular pathways governing the induction of senescence followed by elimination of senescent cells seems to be a product of evolutionary selection as a program that protects the organism from a variety of internal and external threats, while also preserving the organism's integrity. Understanding of these molecular pathways might eventually be exploited therapeutically by elimination of senescent cells in order to treat a variety of fibrosis-related conditions, prevent cancer, and delay tissue ageing.
Peri I., Mamrud-Brains H., Rodin S., Krizhanovsky V., Shai Y., Nir S. & Naim M.
(2000)
American Journal of Physiology - Cell Physiology.
278,
1,
p. C17-C25
Some amphipathic bitter tastants and non-sugar sweeteners are direct activators of G proteins and stimulate transduction pathways in cells not related to taste. We demonstrate that the amphipathic bitter tastants quinine and cyclo(Leu-Trp) and the non-sugar sweetener saccharin translocate rapidly through multilamellar liposomes. Furthermore, when rat circumvallate (CV) taste buds were incubated with the above tastants for 30 s, their intracellular concentrations increased by 3.5- to 7-fold relative to their extracellular concentrations. The time course of this dramatic accumulation was also monitored in situ in rat single CV taste buds under a confocal laser-scanning microscope. Tastants were clearly localized to the taste cell cytosol. It is proposed that, due to their rapid permeation into taste cells, these amphipathic tastants may be available for activation of signal transduction components (e.g., G proteins) directly within the time course of taste sensation. Such activation may occur in addition to the action of these tastants on putative G protein-coupled receptors. This phenomenon may be related to the slow taste onset and lingering aftertaste typically produced by many bitter tastants and non-sugar sweeteners.
Rapid entry of bitter and sweet tastants into liposomes and taste cells: implications for signal transduction
Peri I., Mamrud-Brains H., Rodin S., Krizhanovsky V., Shai Y., Nir S. & Naim M.
(2000)
American Journal Of Physiology-Cell Physiology.
278,
1,
p. C17-C25
Some amphipathic bitter tastants and non-sugar sweeteners are direct activators of G proteins and stimulate transduction pathways in cells not related to taste. We demonstrate that the amphipathic bitter tastants quinine and cyclo(Leu-Trp) and the non-sugar sweetener saccharin translocate rapidly through multilamellar liposomes. Furthermore, when rat circumvallate (CV) taste buds were incubated with the above tastants for 30 s, their intracellular concentrations increased by 3.5- to 7-fold relative to their extracellular concentrations. The time course of this dramatic accumulation was also monitored in situ in rat single CV taste buds under a confocal laser-scanning microscope. Tastants were clearly localized to the taste cell cytosol. It is proposed that, due to their rapid permeation into taste cells, these amphipathic tastants may be available for activation of signal transduction components (e.g., G proteins) directly within the time course of taste sensation. Such activation may occur in addition to the action of these tastants on putative G protein-coupled receptors. This phenomenon may be related to the slow taste onset and lingering aftertaste typically produced by many bitter tastants and non-sugar sweeteners.
TAL M., AMMAR D., KARPUJ M., Krizhanovsky V., NAIM M. & THOMPSON D.
(1995)
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications.
209,
2,
p. 752-759
We have used a homology based approach to identify G protein-coupled receptors preferentially expressed in retinal and taste cells. Rat and bovine sequences encoding a novel G protein-coupled receptor have been isolated. Analysis indicates that while the protein sequence is most similar to the receptors for somatostatin and opiates, it is unlikely to be a subtype of these receptors. Northern and RNase protection analysis indicates that the gene is preferentially expressed in neural and sensory tissues.