4.6 Article

Quantifying pharmacologic suppression of cellular senescence: prevention of cellular hypertrophy versus preservation of proliferative potential

Journal

AGING-US
Volume 1, Issue 12, Pages 1008-1016

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/aging.100115

Keywords

cellular senescence; cellular hypertrophy; aging-suppression; rapamycin; mTOR

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Development of agents that suppress aging (aging suppressants) requires quantification of cellular senescence. Cellular senescence in vitro is characterized by a large cell morphology and permanent loss of proliferative potential. When HT-1080 cells were arrested by p21, they continued to grow exponentially in size and became hypertrophic with a 15-fold increase in the protein content per cell. These changes were mirrored by accumulation of GFP ( driven by CMV promoter) per cell, which also served as a marker of cellular hypertrophy. Preservation of proliferative potential ( competence) was measured by an increase in live cell number, when p21 was switched off. While modestly decreasing hypertrophy in p21-arresrted cells, rapamycin considerably preserved competence, converting senescence into quiescence. Preservation of proliferative potential ( competence) correlated with inhibition of S6 phosphorylation by rapamycin. When p21 was switched off, competent cells, by resuming proliferation, became progressively less hypertrophic. Preservation of proliferative potential is a sensitive and quantitative measure of suppression of mTOR-driven senescence.

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