Abstract
Comment on: Kolesnichenko M, et al. Cell Cycle 2012; 11:2391-401 and Pospelova TV, et al. Cell Cycle 2012; 11:2402-407.
Cellular senescence is a process initiated either when cells proliferate past their potential (replicative senescence) or by activation of an oncogenic stress (oncogene-induced senescence). Both of these events are characterized by the activation of a DNA damage response, which is initiated by eroded telomeres in the case of replicative senescence, and aberrant products of DNA replication in the case of oncogene induced senescence.1 Senescence plays a critical tumor-suppression role in vivo, and alterations in the senescence program are a hallmark of cancer cells. Bypass of senescence is critical for tumor progression and involves the p53 and pRB tumor-suppressor pathways.2 Indeed, expression of DNA tumor virus oncoproteins that target p53 and pRB can bypass senescence in cultured cells,3 and concomitant loss of pRB and p53 bypasses senescence in human diploid fibroblasts.4 In addition to being an obligatory step for tumor progression, bypass of senescence creates a favorable environment in which additional tumor-promoting mutations can be acquired. For example, inactivation of p53 in the context of telomere erosion promotes rampant genomic instability mediated by cycles of aberrant DNA damage/DNA repair events.5
In a new study, Kolesnichenko et al. describe a critical role for the mTOR pathway in senescence induction.6 This work demonstrates that inhibition of mTOR is sufficient to delay RAS-induced senescence as well as replicative senescence. Using a combination of inhibitory molecules, shRNA-mediated knockdown and expression of inhibitory proteins, the authors demonstrate that inhibition of the TORC1 complex is sufficient to delay senescence induction. These findings are further corroborated by the independent work of Pospelova and colleagues showing that rapamycin treatment delays senescence induction in murine fibroblasts.7 These intriguing findings raise the question of why mTOR inhibition inhibits senescence induction. The work of Kolesnchenko and colleagues provides two clues to explain this phenotype. First, mTOR inhibition results in the activation of the pro-survival factor AKT, a factor that could explain how cells can proliferate in the face of an ongoing senescence-inducing signal. In addition, the authors find reduced levels of p53 and its target gene p21 upon mTOR inhibition. These findings are particularly significant considering the critical role for both p53 activation and p21 induction in senescence induction.
In conclusion, the finding that inhibition of the TORC1 complex has a profound effect on the onset of senescence might explain why rapamycin treatment had limited success in the treatment of cancer.8 On the other hand, rapamycin slows aging and thus delays cancer in mice.9
Footnotes
Previously published online: www.landesbioscience.com/journals/cc/article/21529
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