4.3 Article

Bafilomycin A1 triggers proliferative potential of senescent cancer cells in vitro and in NOD/SCID mice

期刊

ONCOTARGET
卷 8, 期 6, 页码 9303-9322

出版社

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.14066

关键词

colon cancer; chemotherapy; senescence; autophagy; angiogenesis

资金

  1. Foundation for Polish Science
  2. European Union under the European Social Fund [125/UD/SKILLS/2013]
  3. Ministry of Science and Higher Education [IP2012 062172]
  4. National Science Center [2013/09/B/NZ3/01389, 2012/05/E/ST2/02180]
  5. EU FP7 Project BIO-IMAGINE: BIO-IMAGing in research INnovation and Education [264173]
  6. Ministry of Science and Higher Education

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Anticancer therapies that induce DNA damage tend to trigger senescence in cancer cells, a process known as therapy-induced senescence (TIS). Such cells may undergo atypical divisions, thus contributing to tumor re-growth. Accumulation of senescent cancer cells reduces survival of patients after chemotherapy. As senescence interplays with autophagy, a dynamic recycling process, we sought to study whether inhibition of autophagy interferes with divisions of TIS cells. We exposed human colon cancer HCT116 cells to repeated cycles of a chemotherapeutic agent doxorubicin (doxo) and demonstrated induction of hallmarks of TIS (e.g. growth arrest, hypertrophy, poliploidization and secretory phenotype) and certain properties of cancer stem cells (increased NANOG expression, percentages of CD24+ cells and side population). Colonies of small and highly proliferative progeny appeared shortly after drug removal. Treatment with bafilomycin A1 (BAF A1), an autophagy inhibitor, postponed short term in vitro cell re-population. It was associated with reduction in the number of diploid and increase in the number of poliploid cells. In a long term, a pulse of BAF A1 resulted in reactivation of autophagy in a subpopulation of HCT116 cells and increased proliferation. Accordingly, the senescent HCT116 cells treated with BAF A1 when injected into NOD/SCID mice formed tumors, in contrast to the controls. Our results suggest that senescent cancer cells that appear during therapy, can be considered as dormant cells that contribute to cancer re-growth, when chemotherapeutic treatment is stopped. These data unveil new mechanisms of TIS-related cancer maintenance and re-population, triggered by a single pulse of BAF A1 treatment.

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