Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Oxylipin biosynthesis reinforces cellular senescence and allows detection of senolysis.

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

June 1, 2021

Journal

Cell metabolism

Volume/Issue

33/6

ISSN

1932-7420

Cellular senescence is a stress or damage response that causes a permanent proliferative arrest and secretion of numerous factors with potent biological activities. This senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) has been characterized largely for secreted proteins that participate in embryogenesis, wound healing, inflammation, and many age-related pathologies. By contrast, lipid components of the SASP are understudied. We show that senescent cells activate the biosynthesis of several oxylipins that promote segments of the SASP and reinforce the proliferative arrest. Notably, senescent cells synthesize and accumulate an unstudied intracellular prostaglandin, 1a,1b-dihomo-15-deoxy-delta-12,14-prostaglandin J2. Released 15-deoxy-delta-12,14-prostaglandin J2 is a biomarker of senolysis in culture and in vivo. This and other prostaglandin D2-related lipids promote the senescence arrest and SASP by activating RAS signaling. These data identify an important aspect of cellular senescence and a method to detect senolysis.

Alternate Journal

Cell Metab

PubMed ID

33811820

PubMed Central ID

PMC8501892

Authors

Christopher D Wiley
Rishi Sharma
Sonnet S Davis
Jose Alberto Lopez-Dominguez
Kylie P Mitchell
Samantha Wiley
Fatouma Alimirah
Dong Eun Kim
Therese Payne
Andrew Rosko
Eliezer Aimontche
Sharvari M Deshpande
Francesco Neri
Chisaka Kuehnemann
Marco Demaria
Arvind Ramanathan
Judith Campisi

Keywords

Oxylipins
Animals
Senotherapeutics
Mice
Humans
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Senescence-Associated Secretory Phenotype
Cell Line
Biomarkers