Cancer Research, volume 80, issue 17, pages 3606-3619

Cellular Senescence Promotes Skin Carcinogenesis through p38MAPK and p44/42MAPK Signaling

Fatouma Alimirah 1
Tanya Pulido 1
Alexis Valdovinos 1
Sena Alptekin 1, 2
Emily Chang 1
Elijah Jones 1
Diego A Diaz 1
Jose Flores 1
Michael Velarde 1, 3
Marco Demaria 1, 4
Albert R. Davalos 1
Christopher D. Wiley 1
Chandani Limbad 1
Pierre-Yves Desprez 1
Judith CAMPISI 1, 5
Show full list: 15 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2020-09-01
Journal: Cancer Research
scimago Q1
SJR3.468
CiteScore16.1
Impact factor12.5
ISSN00085472, 15387445
Cancer Research
Oncology
Abstract

Cellular senescence entails an irreversible growth arrest that evolved in part to prevent cancer. Paradoxically, senescent cells secrete proinflammatory and growth-stimulatory molecules, termed the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP), which is correlated with cancer cell proliferation in culture and xenograft models. However, at what tumor stage and how senescence and the SASP act on endogenous tumor growth in vivo is unknown. To understand the role of senescence in cancer etiology, we subjected p16-3MR transgenic mice, which permit the identification and selective elimination of senescent cells in vivo, to the well-established two-step protocol of squamous cell skin carcinoma, in which tumorigenesis is initiated by a carcinogen 7,12-dimethylbenz[α]anthracene, and then promoted by 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA). We show that TPA promotes skin carcinogenesis by inducing senescence and a SASP. Systemic induction of senescence in nontumor-bearing p16-3MR mice using a chemotherapy followed by the two-step carcinogenesis protocol potentiated the conversion of benign papillomas to carcinomas by elevating p38MAPK and MAPK/ERK signaling. Ablation of senescent cells reduced p38MAPK and MAPK/ERK signaling, thereby preventing the progression of benign papillomas to carcinomas. Thus, we show for the first time that senescent cells are tumor promoters, not tumor initiators, and that they stimulate skin carcinogenesis by elevating p38MAPK and MAPK/ERK signaling. These findings pave the way for developing novel therapeutics against senescence-fueled cancers.

Significance:

These findings identify chemotherapy-induced senescence as a culprit behind tumor promotion, suggesting that elimination of senescent cells after chemotherapy may reduce occurrence of second cancers decades later.

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