[HTML][HTML] Oncogene-induced senescence relayed by an interleukin-dependent inflammatory network

T Kuilman, C Michaloglou, LCW Vredeveld, S Douma… - Cell, 2008 - cell.com
T Kuilman, C Michaloglou, LCW Vredeveld, S Douma, R van Doorn, CJ Desmet, LA Aarden…
Cell, 2008cell.com
Oncogene-induced cellular senescence (OIS) is emerging as a potent cancer-protective
response to oncogenic events, serving to eliminate early neoplastic cells from the
proliferative pool. Using combined genetic and bioinformatic analysis, we find that OIS is
linked specifically to the activation of an inflammatory transcriptome. Induced genes
included the pleiotropic cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6), which upon secretion by senescent
cells acted mitogenically in a paracrine fashion. Unexpectedly, IL-6 was also required for the …
Summary
Oncogene-induced cellular senescence (OIS) is emerging as a potent cancer-protective response to oncogenic events, serving to eliminate early neoplastic cells from the proliferative pool. Using combined genetic and bioinformatic analysis, we find that OIS is linked specifically to the activation of an inflammatory transcriptome. Induced genes included the pleiotropic cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6), which upon secretion by senescent cells acted mitogenically in a paracrine fashion. Unexpectedly, IL-6 was also required for the execution of OIS, but in a cell-autonomous mode. Its depletion caused the inflammatory network to collapse and abolished senescence entry and maintenance. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the transcription factor C/EBPβ cooperates with IL-6 to amplify the activation of the inflammatory network, including IL-8. In human colon adenomas, IL-8 specifically colocalized with arrested, p16INK4A-positive epithelium. We propose a model in which the context-dependent cytostatic and promitogenic functions of specific interleukins contribute to connect senescence with an inflammatory phenotype and cancer.
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