Ageing Research Reviews, volume 70, pages 101412

Dissecting primary and secondary senescence to enable new senotherapeutic strategies

Tesfahun Dessale Admasu 1
Michael Rae 1
Alexandra Stolzing 2, 3
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-09-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR3.376
CiteScore19.8
Impact factor12.5
ISSN15681637, 18729649
Biochemistry
Molecular Biology
Biotechnology
Neurology
Aging
Abstract
• There is no universal gene expression signature for senescent cells or the SASP. • Primary and secondary senescent cells seem to be distinct from each other in some respects. • Secondary senescence can spread via secreted molecules, extracellular vesicles, or cell-to-cell contact. • Secondary senescence contributes to the accumulation of senescent cells and is associated with the diseases of aging. Cellular senescence is a state of stable cell cycle arrest that is known to be elicited in response to different stresses or forms of damage. Senescence limits the replication of old, damaged, and precancerous cells in the short-term but is implicated in diseases and debilities of aging due to loss of regenerative reserve and secretion of a complex combination of factors called the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP). More recently, investigators have discovered that senescent cells induced by these methods (what we term “primary senescent cells”) are also capable of inducing other non-senescent cells to undergo senescence — a phenomenon we call “secondary senescence.” Secondary senescence has been demonstrated to occur via two broad types of mechanisms. First, factors in the SASP have been shown to be involved in spreading senescence; we call this phenomenon “paracrine senescence.” Second, primary senescent cells can induce senescence via an additional group of mechanisms involving cell-to-cell contacts of different types; we term this phenomenon “juxtacrine senescence.” “Secondary senescence” in our definition is thus the overarching term for both paracrine and juxtacrine senescence together. By allowing cells that are inherently small in number and incapable of replication to increase in number and possibly spread to anatomically distant locations, secondary senescence allows an initially small number of senescent cells to contribute further to age-related pathologies. We propose that understanding how primary and secondary senescent cells differ from each other and the mechanisms of their spread will enable the development of new rejuvenation therapies to target different senescent cell populations and interrupt their spread, extending human health- and potentially lifespan.
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