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The senescent microenvironment promotes the emergence of heterogeneous cancer stem-like cells.

Authors: Luis Jaime LJ. Castro-Vega, Karina K. Jouravleva, Paola P. Ortiz-Montero, Win-Yan WY. Liu, Jorge Luis JL. Galeano, Martha M. Romero, Tatiana T. Popova, Silvia S. Bacchetti, Jean Paul JP. Vernot, Arturo A. Londoño-Vallejo
Published: 07/13/2015, Carcinogenesis

Abstract

There is a well-established association between aging and the onset of metastasis. Although the mechanisms through which age impinges upon the malignant phenotype remain uncharacterized, the role of a senescent microenvironment has been emphasized. We reported previously that human epithelial cells that undergo telomere-driven chromosome instability (T-CIN) display global microRNA (miR) deregulation and develop migration and invasion capacities. Here, we show that post-crisis cells are not able to form tumors unless a senescent microenvironment is provided. The characterization of cell lines established from such tumors revealed that these cells have acquired cell autonomous tumorigenicity, giving rise to heterogeneous tumors. Further experiments demonstrate that explanted cells, while displaying differences in cell differentiation markers, are all endowed of enhanced stem cell properties including self-renewal and multilineage differentiation capacity. Treatments of T-CIN+ cells with senescence-conditioned media induce sphere formation exclusively in cells with senescence-associated tumorigenicity, a capacity that depends on miR-145 repression. These results indicate that the senescent microenvironment, while promoting further transdifferentiations in cells with genome instability, is able to propel the progression of premalignant cells towards a malignant, cell stem-like state.

© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: [email protected].
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