Abstract

We investigated the effects of AMPK on H2O2-induced premature senescence in primary human keratinocytes. Incubation with 50 µM H2O2 for 2 h resulted in premature senescence with characteristic increases in senescence-associated ß-galactosidase (SA-gal) staining 3 days later and no changes in AMPK or p38 MAPK activity. The increase in SA-gal staining was preceded by increases in both p53 phosphorylation (S15) (1 h) and transactivation (6 h) and the abundance of the cyclin inhibitor p21CIP1 (16 h). Incubation with AICAR or resveratrol, both of which activated AMPK, prevented the H2O2-induced increases in both SA-Gal staining and p21 abundance. In addition, AICAR diminished the increase in p53 transactivation. The decreases in SA-Gal expression induced by resveratrol and AICAR were prevented by the pharmacological AMPK inhibitor Compound C, expression of a DN-AMPK or AMPK knock-down with shRNA. Likewise, both knockdown of AMPK and expression of DN-AMPK were sufficient to induce senescence, even in the absence of exogenous H2O2. As reported by others, we found that AMPK activation by itself increased p53 phosphorylation at S15 in embryonic fibroblasts (MEF), whereas under the same conditions it decreased p53 phosphorylation in the keratinocytes, human aortic endothelial cells, and human HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells. In conclusion, the results indicate that H2O2 at low concentrations causes premature senescence in human keratinocytes by activating p53-p21CIP1 signaling and that these effects can be prevented by acute AMPK activation and enhanced by AMPK downregulation. They also suggest that this action of AMPK may be cell or context-specific.

Highlights

  • Ageing is a physiological phenomenon that occurs in all eukaryocytes

  • Establishment of conditions for inducing premature senescence in primary human keratinocytes Previous reports suggest that keratinocytes may undergo apoptosis or premature senescence depending on the dose of H2O2 to which they are exposed [8,28]

  • We show here that H2O2-induced premature senescence in primary human keratinocytes can be prevented by AMPK activation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ageing is a physiological phenomenon that occurs in all eukaryocytes. In many tissues, it is associated with an increased number of senesced cells [1,2]. Senescent cells undergo an apparently irreversible growth arrest, they remain metabolically active and display characteristic changes in cell morphology, physiology and gene expression and a resistance to apoptosis. They produce inflammatory and other factors that can have adverse effects on adjacent cells that in turn could contribute to various disorders [1]. Cellular senescence could play a critical role in aging in vivo

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call