Abstract

Cellular senescence prevents the proliferation of cells at risk for neoplastic transformation. Nonetheless, the senescence response is thought to be antagonistically pleiotropic and thus contribute to aging phenotypes, including, ironically, late life cancers. The cancer-promoting activity of senescent cells is likely due to secreted molecules, the identity of which remains largely unknown. Here, we have shown that senescent fibroblasts, much more than presenescent fibroblasts, stimulate tumor vascularization in mice. Weakly malignant epithelial cells co-injected with senescent fibroblasts had larger and greater numbers of blood vessels compared with controls. Accordingly, increased vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression was a frequent characteristic of senescent human and mouse fibroblasts in culture. Importantly, conditioned medium from senescent fibroblasts, more than medium from presenescent cells, stimulates cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells to invade a basement membrane, a hallmark of angiogenesis. Increased VEGF expression was specific to the senescent phenotype and increased whether senescence was induced by replicative exhaustion, overexpression of p16(Ink4a), or overexpression of oncogenic RAS. The senescence-dependent increase in VEGF production was accompanied by very little increase in hypoxic-inducible (transcription) factor 1 alpha protein levels, and hypoxia further induced VEGF in senescent cells. This result suggests the rise in VEGF expression at senescence is not a hypoxic response. Our findings may in part explain why senescent cells stimulate tumorigenesis in vivo and support the idea that senescent cells may facilitate age-associated cancer development by secreting factors that promote malignant progression.

Highlights

  • In complex organisms such as mammals, diverse stress can induce proliferative cells to either die by programmed cell death or irreversibly withdraw from the cell cycle by a process termed cellular senescence

  • We found that senescent fibroblasts secrete factors that can stimulate the proliferation of premalignant epithelial cells in culture and facilitate their conversion to malignant tumors in vivo [10]

  • This study showed that such fibroblasts might promote human breast cancer progression by secreting stromal cell-derived factor 1 (SDF-1)3

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Summary

Introduction

In complex organisms such as mammals, diverse stress can induce proliferative cells to either die by programmed cell death (apoptosis) or irreversibly withdraw from the cell cycle by a process termed cellular senescence Both responses most likely evolved to suppress the proliferation of dysfunctional or damaged cells and the possibility of oncogenic transformation [1]. We found that senescent fibroblasts secrete factors that can stimulate the proliferation of premalignant epithelial cells in culture and facilitate their conversion to malignant tumors in vivo [10]. This finding suggests that the senescence of stromal cells might cooperate with the acquisition of oncogenic mutations by epithelial cells to promote late life cancers [11]. Angiogenesis is considered one of six important steps required for the development of a malignant tumor [17]

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