Although senescence is a defining property of euploid mammalian cells, its physiologic basis remains obscure. Previously, cell kinetics properties of normal tissue cells have not been considered in models for senescence. We now provide evidence that senescence is in fact the natural consequence of normal in vivo somatic stem cell kinetics extended in culture. This concept of senescence is based on our discovery that cells engineered to conditionally express the well-recognized tumor suppressor protein and senescence factor, p53, exhibit asymmetric cell kinetics. In vivo, asymmetric cell kinetics are essential for maintenance of somatic stem cells; ex vivo, the same cell kinetics yield senescence as a simple kinetic endpoint. This new "asymmetric cell kinetics model" for senescence suggests novel strategies for the isolation and propagation of somatic tissue stem cells in culture.
Although senescence is a defining property of euploid mammalian cells, its physiologic basis remains obscure. Previously, cell kinetics properties of normal tissue cells have not been considered in models for senescence. We now provide evidence that senescence is in fact the natural consequence of normal in vivo somatic stem cell kinetics extended in culture. This concept of senescence is based on our discovery that cells engineered to conditionally express the well-recognized tumor suppressor protein and senescence factor, p53, exhibit asymmetric cell kinetics. In vivo, asymmetric cell kinetics are essential for maintenance of somatic stem cells; ex vivo, the same cell kinetics yield senescence as a simple kinetic endpoint. This new "asymmetric cell kinetics model" for senescence suggests novel strategies for the isolation and propagation of somatic tissue stem cells in culture.
Cellular senescence is a defining property of euploid cells in
culture [1, 2]. Cultures derived from cells explanted from tissues of a variety of animal species exhibit a finite number of population doublings before undergoing an irreversible arrest of cell replication. Several genes have been implicated as effectors of senescence in culture. These include genetic components of the Rb and p53 growth regulation pathways [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8] and genes encoding components of telomerase [9, 10, 11]. The p53
and Rb pathways appear to effect senescence proper, being
required for the initial cessation of growth by primary cell
cultures [3, 8, 12, 13, 14]. In contrast, the ability of telomerase to extend culture life span is limited to cells that have first escaped senescence [8, 12, 13, 14].It has been proposed that the requirement for p53 function in
senescence reflects a p53-dependent checkpoint arrest in response
to the accumulation of eroded chromosome ends due to inadequate
telomerase activity in explanted somatic cells [15, 16]. This idea is now in conflict with recent demonstrations that the p53 and telomerase requirements for senescence and immortalization, respectively, are neither synonymous nor contemporaneous [8, 12, 13, 14, 17]. In this paper, we formulate an alternative explanation for the importance of p53 function in cellular senescence. This explanation is based on our
discovery that immortal cells reconstituted with normal p53
function exhibit asymmetric cell kinetics (herein and [18, 19, 20]).During asymmetric kinetics, cell divisions yield one daughter
cell that is a long-lived dividing cell like its parent cell. The
other daughter is the progenitor of a cell lineage whose
constituents mature into differentiated cells that undergo
terminal cell cycle arrest. When cycling, the cells in this
lineage are called transit cells; in their mature arrested state
they are called terminal cells [21, 22]. Asymmetric cell kinetics are essential for the function of somatic tissue stem cells. It allows them to maintain a relative constant fraction in their respective tissue and preserve long-term proliferative potential while simultaneously functioning to renew
differentiated tissue cells [23, 24].Based on the recognition that p53-dependent asymmetric cell
kinetics pose an important barrier to the long-term propagation
of primary cells in culture, we present a new “asymmetric cell
kinetics model” for senescence. The new model accounts for
cellular senescence in terms of natural tissue cell kinetics that
continue in culture. Because of its basis in fundamental
principles of somatic stem cell function, the model suggests
specific strategies to achieve two elusive goals in stem cell
research, identification and in vitro propagation of
somatic stem cells. There is a great need for methods to
enumerate somatic stem cells in vivo and expand them as
pure populations in vitro for applications in medical
science, cancer research, gene therapy, and tissue engineering.
The presented asymmetric cell kinetics model for cellular
senescence provides the conceptual basis for the development of
such methods.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Cell culture
Temperature-dependent [25] and Zn-dependent [26] p53-inducible cells were maintained as previously described. WI-38 human fibroblasts were supplied by the American Type Culture Collection. Early passage MEFs from p53 “knockout” (ko) mice and wild-type littermates were kindly provide by L. Donehower (Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX; 27). WI-38 cells and MEFs were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (Gibco-BRL) supplemented with10% fetal bovine serum (JRH Biosciences, Lenexa, KS).
Population growth analyses
Population doubling times were determined by published
procedures [18, 19, 26, 27]. Fd values were calculated from population growth data as previously described [19].
Time-lapse analyses
Cells were plated at a density of 104 per 25 cm2 culture flask in 5 ml normal growth medium. After approximately 20 hours of culture, the culture medium was replaced with either fresh normal medium (WI-38 and MEFs) or fresh medium containing 65 μM ZnCl2 (p53-inducible cells and p53-null control cells) that had been equilibrated overnight in a 37°C-5% CO2 incubator. At this cell density, 65 μM ZnCl2 is sufficient to induce p53-dependent growth suppression [26]. After medium replacement, the flasks were returned to a 37°C-5% CO2 incubator for 30 minutes Thereafter, culture flasks were sealed with parafilm and analyzed by time-lapse cinematography or time-lapse digital imaging microscopy.Time-lapse cinematography was performed in a 37°C warm room with an Olympus IMT-2 inverted light microscope integrated with a Bolex 16 mm camera and Olympus auto-control exposure and frame units. Films were analyzed using an Athena time-lapse movie projector (Carson, CA).Time-lapse digital imaging microscopy was performed using a
Quantix cooled CCD camera that was 3 × binned (from 1317 × 1035 to 439 × 345 pixels). A Nikon TE300 inverted phase-contrast microscope equipped with a temperature controlled stage incubator (accurate within 0.1°C) was used with sealed flasks. A 4 × phase objective with an NA of 0.13 was used to give a scale of 5.1 × 5.1 microns/pixel. Images were acquired by ISEE (Inovision) image acquisition and analysis software. Stored images were analyzed as animation within ISEE.For both methods of time-lapse analysis, image collecting was
begun 0.5–1.5 hours after flasks were sealed with parafilm. A single 4× magnification field of cells was photographed for 80–166 hours (average 103 ± 31 hours) at a time-lapse speed of one frame per 3 minutes. At the start of analyses, photographic fields contained 16 to 43 cells (average 25 ± 8.7).
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
p53-dependent growth regulation is sensitive to cell density
We used an inducible expression strategy to investigate the
function of p53 in cellular senescence. Immortal murine cell
lines were genetically engineered to express wild-type murinep53
protein conditionally. The prototype lines were derived from C127
mammary epithelial cells by stable transfection with a gene
expression system activated by reduced temperature. When grown at
37°C, their routine culture temperature, these cells express low levels of endogenous wild-type p53. In a previous report, we showed by immunoprecipitation analyses that culturing at 32.5°C induces a 2- to 3-fold increase in p53 expression [25]. A second generation of p53-inducible cell
lines was derived by reconstituting spontaneously immortalized
p53-null murine embryonic fibroblasts with a wild-type murinep53
cDNA controlled by a modified human metallothionein promoter. We
have reported immunoprecipitation studies which show that, by
increasing the Zn concentration, the p53 protein level of
these cells can be increased in a graded fashion from
undetectable to near normal basal levels [26, 27]. For both types of conditional p53-expressing cells, control lines were derived with expression plasmids deleted for p53 coding sequences [25, 26, 27].Both types of p53-inducible cells exhibit a decrease in growth
rate under conditions of p53 induction [25, 26, 27]. Under
the same conditions of temperature and Zn concentration, no
significant growth effects occur for control cells. However, we
noted that characteristically this difference in the growth
between control and p53-inducible cells did not occur at high
cell density (Figure 1). The population doubling time (PDT) of control and p53-induced cells is in fact quite similar
until cell density falls below about 5 × 104 cells per 25 cm2. Below this density, p53-specific growth suppression is manifest. The PDT of p53-induced cells increases 3-fold over a 4-fold range of decreased cell density (Figure 1, closed symbols). Over the same range, the PDT of control cells (Figure 1, open symbols) is essentially constant. This difference increases further at colony formation densities. At a density of 100 cells per 25 cm2, p53-inducible cells form colonies at 20 to 30 percent the efficiency of control cells [25, 26]. The ability of high cell density to prevent p53-dependent growth suppression is overcome by increased levels of p53 expression. This can be seen for Zn-dependent cultures initiated at the high cell density of 1 × 105 cells per 25 cm2. Whereas 60 μM Zn does not induce p53-dependent cell cycle arrest, 75 μM Zn, which induces a higher level of p53 protein, does so [26]; see also (Figure 2D).
Figure 1
Reconstitution of normal p53 function restores density-dependent growth to immortal cell lines. Population doubling times (PDT) were determined from growth curve analyses, performed at the indicated initial cell densities, for temperature-dependent (closed circles, lines 1h-3 and 1n-3; 25) and Zn-dependent p53-inducible cells (closed squares, lines Ind-5 and Ind-8; 26) and their respective control cells (open circles, lines 1g-1 and 1m-5, 25; open squares, lines Con-2 and Con-3, 26) grown under p53-inducing conditions (32.5°C and 60 μM Zn, respectively). Growth curves for temperature-dependent cells were performed in triplicate; growth curves for Zn-dependent cells were performed in duplicate or triplicate.
Figure 2
Density-dependent p53 growth regulation reflects induction of linear population growth kinetics. (A), Linear growth by p53-expressing fibroblasts. Growth data for [19] as a function of the initial cell density of temperature-dependent (closed circles) and Zn-dependent times in (Figure 1). (B), Control cells. (C), p53-inducible cells. (D), Response of linear kinetics to p53 level induced by increasing Zn concentration [26]. The initial cell density ranged from 0.44 to 1.1 × 105 cells/ 25 cm2/5 ml. Two to six independent bars indicate the standard deviation.
Sensitivity to low cell density is a well-described characteristic property of presenescent cultures of primary cells of both murine and human origin [1, 28]. Earlier studies with murine embryo fibroblasts derived from transgenic p53 gene knockout mice suggested that this property might depend on wild-type p53 expression [29]. Thus, the results of the cell density studies suggested to us that cells engineered to restore wild-type p53 function might regain density-dependent cell kinetics mechanisms found in normal tissue cells.
p53 induces density-dependent linear population growth kinetics
Both temperature-dependent [18, 19, 25] and
Zn-dependent p53-inducible cells (Figure 2A, closed circles) exhibit linear population growth kinetics under conditions of p53 expression. We have shown previously that
nonexponential population growth by cultured cells can be due to
the production of daughter cells that undergo a viable arrest at
a constant rate [19]. To evaluate the effect of cell density on cell kinetics, Fd, the fraction of new daughter cells that divide, was determined for control and p53-inducible cell cultures initiated at different cell densities
(Figure 2B and C).The method of Fd determination has been
described in [19]. Theoretical Fd values range from 0.0 to 1.0. Fd values greater than 0.5 indicate exponential kinetics. A value of 1.0 corresponds to ideal exponential kinetics in which all daughter cells divide with a
cell cycle time (generation time, GT) that equals the population
doubling time (PDT). Values less than 0.5 indicate a majority of
terminal divisions that result in two nondividing cells. Since
cell death and cell loss have been shown insignificant in these
p53-expressing cell cultures [18, 25, 26], an Fd value near the ideal of 0.5 can indicate one of two distinct cell
kinetics programs [22]. It may indicate that dividing cells and nondividing cells occur randomly at equal frequency; or that every division produces one dividing cell and one cell that produces a terminal nondividing cell lineage.We have shown previously that the linear growth kinetics of
temperature-dependent p53-induced mammary epithelial cells are
due to the latter cell kinetics program [18, 19]. For these cells, the increase in population doubling time at low cell
density reflects a p53-dependent switch to asymmetric cell
kinetics. Consistent with this conclusion, the Fd for
temperature-dependent p53-induced cells approaches 0.5 as cell
density decreases (Figure 2C, closed circles).
Zn-dependent p53-expressing embryonic fibroblasts yield a
similar extrapolation of Fd as cell density decreases
(Figure 2C, open circles). Control cells maintain an Fd near 1.0 at all tested cell densities
(Figure 2B), consistent with their density-independent exponential cell kinetics.Reconstitution of normal p53 function restores density-dependent growth to immortal cell lines. Population doubling times (PDT) were determined from growth curve analyses, performed at the indicated initial cell densities, for temperature-dependent (closed circles, lines 1h-3 and 1n-3; 25) and Zn-dependent p53-inducible cells (closed squares, lines Ind-5 and Ind-8; 26) and their respective control cells (open circles, lines 1g-1 and 1m-5, 25; open squares, lines Con-2 and Con-3, 26) grown under p53-inducing conditions (32.5°C and 60 μM Zn, respectively). Growth curves for temperature-dependent cells were performed in triplicate; growth curves for Zn-dependent cells were performed in duplicate or triplicate.Density-dependent p53 growth regulation reflects induction of linear population growth kinetics. (A), Linear growth by p53-expressing fibroblasts. Growth data for [19] as a function of the initial cell density of temperature-dependent (closed circles) and Zn-dependent times in (Figure 1). (B), Control cells. (C), p53-inducible cells. (D), Response of linear kinetics to p53 level induced by increasing Zn concentration [26]. The initial cell density ranged from 0.44 to 1.1 × 105 cells/ 25 cm2/5 ml. Two to six independent bars indicate the standard deviation.The value of Fd depends on the level of p53
expression. p53 expression in the Zn-dependent fibroblasts
increases to a maximum as Zn concentration is raised from
60 μM to 90 μM [26]. As shown in Figure 2D (open circles), at the maximum cell density used in growth experiments, Fd decreases to 0.5 as the Zn concentration is increased from 60 μM to
90 μM. In a previous report, we provided evidence that individual cell lineages exhibit either exponential kinetics or asymmetric kinetics, but not mixed patterns [18]. Therefore, Fd values between 1.0 and 0.5 indicate that whereas some cells initiate asymmetric kinetics, others continue to divide with exponential kinetics. Cell density and p53 expression appear to be interdependent determinants of the probability that a cell will adopt asymmetric cell kinetics.Division lineages for p53-expressing fibroblasts. Shown are examples of characteristic asymmetric cell kinetics lineages observed in time-lapse analyses of p53-inducible cells (line Ind-8; 26) grown
under inducing conditions (A–D) and presenescent human and
murine embryonic fibroblast cell strains grown under routine
culture conditions. (E) and (F), WI-38 cells at passage 18 and
26, respectively; (G), wtMEFs at passage 6. Lineages are uneven
at end because cell bodies do not indicate passage of time.
“Fate uncertain” indicates that a cell either migrated from the
field of view or was not observed for sufficient time to assign
its division state with confidence.
p53 is a genetic determinant of asymmetric cell kinetics in cultured fibroblasts
Time-lapse cinematography and digital imaging microscopy were
used to evaluate p53-dependent cell kinetics in several different
types of fibroblasts. Division lineages were determined for the
p53-inducible murine embryonic fibroblasts; presenescent murine
embryonic fibroblasts from wild-type mice (wtMEFs) or mice with a
homozygous disruption of the p53 gene (p53koMEFs; 27); and
presenescent WI-38 human diploid fibroblasts. Examples of
division lineages for cells expressing wild-type p53 are
diagrammed in Figure 3.
Figure 3
Division lineages for p53-expressing fibroblasts. Shown are examples of characteristic asymmetric cell kinetics lineages observed in time-lapse analyses of p53-inducible cells (line Ind-8; 26) grown
under inducing conditions (A–D) and presenescent human and
murine embryonic fibroblast cell strains grown under routine
culture conditions. (E) and (F), WI-38 cells at passage 18 and
26, respectively; (G), wtMEFs at passage 6. Lineages are uneven
at end because cell bodies do not indicate passage of time.
“Fate uncertain” indicates that a cell either migrated from the
field of view or was not observed for sufficient time to assign
its division state with confidence.
An intriguing cell kinetics feature is evident from the lineage
analyses. When symmetric divisions occur (i.e., divisions producing two dividing daughters), one of the daughters
typically undergoes a terminal division (Figure 3C and D). Target gene expression analyses indicate that p53 is active in gene regulation 2 to 5 hours after induction (Y. Liu and J. L. Sherley, submitted), well before the symmetric divisions
occur. This pattern is also observed in the pedigrees of WI-38
cells, which express wild-type p53 constitutively (Figure 4E and F). Therefore, it seems unlikely that
sub-optimal p53 expression is responsible. In addition, symmetric
divisions of this type have been observed at later times in
lineages as well. These occasional symmetric divisions
in otherwise simple asymmetric lineages may indicate variability
in transit cell maturation mechanisms. Whereas, the predominant
transit cell division number (TDN) for p53-induced “transit
cells” in culture is zero (i.e., terminal arrest without
division), at a low frequency, transit cells may mature to a TDN
of 1 (i.e., a single division followed by terminal
arrest of both daughters).
Figure 4
Asymmetric cell kinetics model for cellular senescence.
Top, somatic tissue stem cell (bold-lined circles) turnover unit
(TU). In vivo there are three stem cell kinetics states:
highly regulated symmetric kinetics that produce two stem cells
(bracketed); dormancy (stippled circle); and asymmetric cell
kinetics, the most populated stem cell kinetic state in most
tissues [21, 22, 23, 24]. TDN, the number of transit cell generations before terminal arrest (closed circles), varies in different tissues from 0.0 to n. 2TDN = 0.5 × number of transit cells in the TU [24]. Bottom, the
ex vivo continuation of in vivo asymmetric
cell kinetics results in cellular senescence. Because symmetric
stem divisions are rare and possibly proapoptotic [31], asymmetric TU kinetics predominate in culture. The dilution of asymmetric stem cells by accumulating nondividing terminal cells is responsible for the observed decline in population doubling rate. Loss of p53 function in cell culture prevents senescence by allowing asymmetric stem cells to divide symmetrically; resulting in the exponential division that characterizes immortalization. In support of this model, reconstitution of normal p53 function in immortal cells restores asymmetric cell kinetics and senescence. PDL, cumulative population doublings.
From the division lineages, we quantified the contribution of
different division symmetries to the population kinetics of cells
with different levels of p53 expression. We define three cell
division symmetries: (1) terminal, both daughters are nondividing
cells; (2) symmetric, both daughters divide; and (3) asymmetric,
one daughter divides, the other does not (see Table 1A). Asymmetric divisions are rare (9%) in control cell cultures that have exponential population kinetics (i.e., p53-null
control cells grown under p53-inducing conditions). In contrast,
under conditions for asymmetric cell kinetics, they are 5 times
more frequent than either terminal or symmetric divisions. This
frequency is 2.5-fold greater than the frequency expected if
daughter cells divided randomly with 50 percent efficiency. It is
important to factor into this evaluation that, as noted above,
symmetric divisions observed under conditions of p53 expression
characteristically yield transit cells with a TDN = 1.
Therefore, divisions by p53-expressing cells are effectively
all asymmetric.
Table 1
Division symmetry analyses of p53-expressing and p53-null fibroblasts
A. Division symmetry analysis
Symmetry
Con-3
Ind-8
p53koMEF
wtMEF
WI-38
(n = 23)
(n = 52)
(n = 12)
(n = 5)
(n = 15)
Terminal
17%
15%
8%
40%
80%
Asymmetric
9%
72%
0%
40%
13%
Symmetric
74%
13%
92%
20%
7%
The indicated cells were examined by time-lapse cinematography or digital imaging microscopy: Control p53-null, Con-3 cells, and p53-inducible, Ind-8 cells, grown under p53-inducing conditions (65 μM ZnCl2; 26); presenescent murine embryo fibroblasts from either wild-type mice (wtMEF; passage 6; 27) or mice with a homozygous disruption of the p53 gene (p53koMEF; passage 12; 27); presenescent human WI-38 diploid fibroblasts (Data from passage 18 and 26 cultures, which did not differ significantly, were combined.) All cells were plated at an initial density of 1 × 104 cells per 25 cm2 per 5 ml medium. (A)
Individual divisions within pedigrees were classified as described in text. n, number of divisions classified. (B) Data
from pedigree analyses were used to estimate three cell kinetics
parameters. PDT, population doubling time. GT, generation time.
IDT, “interdivision time” = GT of second
daughter cell to divide-GT of first daughter cell to divide.
Calculation of IDT requires that at least one of two new daughter
cells divide during the examination period. ★In some cases, it
was necessary to use the examination times of second daughter
cells, that did not divide during the period of observation, to
estimate a minimum value for IDT. nid, no increase in cell number
detected. n, number of cells (for GT) or daughter pairs (for IDT) evaluated.
Division symmetry analyses of p53-expressing and p53-null fibroblastsThe indicated cells were examined by time-lapse cinematography or digital imaging microscopy: Control p53-null, Con-3 cells, and p53-inducible, Ind-8 cells, grown under p53-inducing conditions (65 μM ZnCl2; 26); presenescent murine embryo fibroblasts from either wild-type mice (wtMEF; passage 6; 27) or mice with a homozygous disruption of the p53 gene (p53koMEF; passage 12; 27); presenescent human WI-38 diploid fibroblasts (Data from passage 18 and 26 cultures, which did not differ significantly, were combined.) All cells were plated at an initial density of 1 × 104 cells per 25 cm2 per 5 ml medium. (A)
Individual divisions within pedigrees were classified as described in text. n, number of divisions classified. (B) Data
from pedigree analyses were used to estimate three cell kinetics
parameters. PDT, population doubling time. GT, generation time.
IDT, “interdivision time” = GT of second
daughter cell to divide-GT of first daughter cell to divide.
Calculation of IDT requires that at least one of two new daughter
cells divide during the examination period. ★In some cases, it
was necessary to use the examination times of second daughter
cells, that did not divide during the period of observation, to
estimate a minimum value for IDT. nid, no increase in cell number
detected. n, number of cells (for GT) or daughter pairs (for IDT) evaluated.Although mortal cell strains do exhibit asymmetric divisions,
they are rare compared to terminal divisions and terminal cells
i.e., cells which do not divide at any time during the
period of examination). Ninety-two percent (n = 38) and 63 percent (n = 27) of wtMEFs and WI-38 cells, respectively, were terminal cells. These nondividing cells were detected in earlier colony formation analyses [18]; and their contribution to the senescent growth kinetics of mortal cell strains was predicted in earlier mathematical modeling studies [19]. Asymmetric divisions have not been observed in p53koMEF cultures. Ninety-two percent of observed divisions in these cultures were symmetric. This finding is consistent with the observation that cells from both embryonic and adult tissues of p53ko mice are immortal in culture from the time of explant [29, 30].Asymmetric cell kinetics model for cellular senescence.
Top, somatic tissue stem cell (bold-lined circles) turnover unit
(TU). In vivo there are three stem cell kinetics states:
highly regulated symmetric kinetics that produce two stem cells
(bracketed); dormancy (stippled circle); and asymmetric cell
kinetics, the most populated stem cell kinetic state in most
tissues [21, 22, 23, 24]. TDN, the number of transit cell generations before terminal arrest (closed circles), varies in different tissues from 0.0 to n. 2TDN = 0.5 × number of transit cells in the TU [24]. Bottom, the
ex vivo continuation of in vivo asymmetric
cell kinetics results in cellular senescence. Because symmetric
stem divisions are rare and possibly proapoptotic [31], asymmetric TU kinetics predominate in culture. The dilution of asymmetric stem cells by accumulating nondividing terminal cells is responsible for the observed decline in population doubling rate. Loss of p53 function in cell culture prevents senescence by allowing asymmetric stem cells to divide symmetrically; resulting in the exponential division that characterizes immortalization. In support of this model, reconstitution of normal p53 function in immortal cells restores asymmetric cell kinetics and senescence. PDL, cumulative population doublings.The division lineage data provided an evaluation of three
important cell kinetics parameters (see Table 1B). These are PDT, GT, and IDT, the interdivision time. PDT was calculated under the assumption of exponential growth [19] with cell count data from monitored cultures and nonmonitored cultures grown in parallel. GT was determined from the time elapsed before new daughter cells divided. GT was very similar for all cell types. Only p53koMEFs showed a statistically significant difference in GT (versus wtMEFs; p < 0.05). The GT of p53-null cells was equivalent to their PDT. IDT, the time interval between the division of two daughter cells, for p53-null cells was short compared to their GT. These two relationships
define symmetric cell kinetics that produce exponential population
kinetics. In contrast, despite having comparable GTs, p53-expressing cells had PDTs that were greater than or equal to 3-fold longer than their GTs. In fact, during the period of analysis, no increase in population size was detected for mortal cell strains that expressed p53. In earlier studies, the PDTs of presenescent WI-38 cells and mortal human intestinal epithelium cells were shown to be 10-fold greater than their respective GTs [18, 19]. This is not surprising, given the large
fraction of terminal cells in these cultures. Importantly, the
minimum estimate for the IDT of p53-expressing model cells (see ★
in Table 1B) was significantly longer than that of p53-null cells (p < 0.001). Fewer divisions have been evaluated for p53-expressing mortal strains, but the data indicate a longer IDT for these cells as well.
An asymmetric cell kinetics model for cellular senescence
Several observations implicate p53 as an important senescence
determinant. p53 protein expression [32] and transcriptional regulation activity [33, 34] are elevated in senescent cells;
and p53 gene mutation is frequently associated with spontaneous
immortalization of cells in culture [4, 35, 36]. Several
diverse proteins that inactivate wild-type p53 also immortalize
primary cells in culture [3, 37]. Expression of p21waf1, the p53-induced cyclin kinase inhibitor, has been implicated as an important senescence determinant. Transgenic knockout of the p21waf1 gene is reported to extend the life span of mortal cell strains in culture [6]. More recently, it has been shown that p53-null immortal tumor cell lines undergo senescence when wild-type p53 function is restored [38].Previously, we have shown that near-physiologic expression of the
wild-type p53 protein can induce stem cell-like asymmetric
kinetics in immortal epithelial cell lines [18, 19]. In this paper, we extend this seminal finding to characterization of asymmetric cell kinetics restored to immortal p53-null fibroblasts. Recognition of this cellular property of p53 brings a new view to the significance of p53 mutations in humancancers [18, 20] and explains its importance in cellular senescence. We now formulate these new ideas into a cell kinetics model for senescence in culture (Figure 4).Many features of tissue cell maturation and differentiation are
lost in culture. These processes which occur in the transit cell
compartment [22] may require complex soluble tissue factor mixtures, extracellular matrix interactions, and cell-cell interactions that are disrupted or lost in culture. A critical
feature of transit cell maturation in vivo is limited exponential division. However, the nature of the interactions among transit cell division, maturation, and differentiation are poorly understood. These three properties of transit cells certainly differ from tissue to tissue, and their integration is likely to differ as well. Such differences may account for idiosyncratic features of the initial growth kinetics of cell
cultures derived from tissues of different type, different developmental stage, or different species. Our studies (herein;
[18, 19]; and unpublished data) indicate that, despite the disruption and loss of in vivo transit cell programs, cells of diverse tissue origin maintain a rudimentary asymmetric cell kinetics program in culture.In adult somatic tissues of vertebrates, long-lived somatic stem
cells, which are responsible for tissue renewal, divide with
asymmetric cell kinetics ([21, 22, 23]; see Figure 4, top). Whether asymmetric stem kinetics result from a stochastic differentiation mechanism that applies to pools of stem cells or deterministic cellular programs in individual stem cells continues as a subject of much debate [22]. In the former model, stem cells divide to produce either two stem cell daughters or two differentiating daughters. The latter model is distinguished by individual stem cells that produce both a stem cell daughter and a differentiating daughter cell from a single division. Our clonal analyses [19] and time-lapse studies (herein) demonstrate that individual mammalian cells can divide to produce daughters that are asymmetric for cell kinetics properties.Although asymmetric cell kinetics are an essential property of
somatic stem cells, these cells have a rich cell kinetics
repertoire (see Figure 4, top). They can undergo highly regulated symmetric expansions in developing adult tissues and during wound repair. Some stem cells may also lie dormant for long periods before initiating division in response to specific developmental cues, as in reproductive tissues like the breast. However, the predominant kinetic state of somatic stem cells
in vivo is an asymmetric division program [21, 22, 23]. After each asymmetric stem cell division, one daughter cell
divides with the same kinetics as its stem cell parent, but the
other daughter gives rise to a terminal differentiating lineage.
The second daughter may differentiate immediately; or depending
on the tissue, it may undergo a finite number of successive
symmetric divisions to give rise to a larger pool of differentiating transit cells [22]. Transit cell divisions
ultimately result in mature, differentiated, nondividing cells.
The tissue cell renewal unit composed of an asymmetric stem cell,
transit cells, and mature nondividing cells is called a turnover
unit (TU; 24). A TU produces a fixed number of nondividing
differentiated tissue cells per stem cell division. This
regulated production of constituent cells allows vertebrates to
continually renew adult tissues while maintaining relatively
constant tissue cell mass [23].Tissue explants are in effect preparations of disrupted tissue
TUs. Therefore, primary cell cultures initially divide quite
actively due to the division of asymmetric stem cells and
symmetric transit cells. The initial cultures will also contain
maturing nondividing cells. With continued passage, the greater
accumulation of mature nondividing cells will lead to dilution
of dividing cell types, producing an apparent cessation of growth
(Figure 4, bottom). Such dilution of stem cells does not occur in vivo, because nondividing terminal cells
are preferentially removed from tissues at rates that match their
production. The cessation of growth in culture will develop
gradually and end with an exponential increase in population
doubling time that reflects dilution of TUs with linear
accumulation kinetics. The exponential increase in PDT in
senescing cultures has been described previously [39].The presented asymmetric cell kinetics model leads to three
predictions regarding aging and cancer. First, immortalization,
the process by which rare cells in culture escape senescence,
must be due to processes that inactivate the asymmetric division
program of explanted TUs. Second, cancer, a disease characterized
by disruption of TU asymmetric kinetics [23, 24], will be promoted by mutations in genes that control asymmetric cell kinetics. Third, the association between cellular senescence and aging is predicted to reflect loss in the number and/or function of somatic tissue TUs with increasing age. In this paper, we have shown that the first two predictions are realized by the demonstration that the p53tumor suppressor gene, a well-known genetic factor for senescence and cancer, is a regulator of
asymmetric cell kinetics (see Figure 4, bottom). The presented studies pave the way for evaluations of the final prediction.
Future applications in stem cell research
The model cells and cell kinetics principles described in this
paper have potential for application to several areas of
biomedicine, including stem cell research, gene therapy, and
cancer drug discovery. Somatic stem cells are the ideal delivery
vessel for therapeutic genes [40, 41, 42, 43]. However, the physical identification of somatic stem cells and their propagation in culture has not been accomplished [21, 22, 40, 41, 42, 43]. To the extent that asymmetric cell kinetics are unique to somatic stem cells, gene-profile investigations with the model cells may yield specific markers for stem cells.The asymmetric cell kinetics model of senescence predicts that
one obligate barrier to the propagation of somatic stem cells in
culture will be their inherent asymmetric cell kinetics. As
such, an essential requirement for long-term culture of somatic
stem cells will be the ability to induce them to proliferate with
sustained exponential kinetics. Here, we show that cell density
may be an important factor that increases the frequency of
symmetric stem cell divisions. The cell density required for this
effect is less than 1/10 of the density of cells in confluent
monolayers. Therefore, in the effective range of cell density,
there is a significant opportunity for stem cell expansion.The mechanism by which increased cell density suppresses
asymmetric cell kinetics is not yet known. However, it seems
unlikely that cell cycle regulatory proteins like p27Kip1 will be involved, because p27Kip1 appears to be required for cell cycle arrest when exponentially dividing cells reach confluent cell densities [44]. We speculate that the cell density effect may have an important in vivo correlate. In many tissues, stem cells are compartmentalized in a way that physically and chemically insulates them from other stem cells [23]. Under conditions of tissue damage, these barriers are breached, allowing for the possibility that stem cells then stimulate the symmetric expansion of other stem cells by paracrine mechanisms. Such a mechanism would promote tissue repair. In vitro, a similar paracrine mechanism might be responsible for the switch from asymmetric to exponential cell kinetics observed at increased cell densities.Our earlier studies predict that agents that modulate p53
function may also have the ability to promote stem cell
propagation in culture. We have shown that purine nucleotide
precursors, that overcome p53-induced inhibition of guanine
ribonucleotide biosynthesis, prevent p53-dependent asymmetric
cell kinetics [18, 25, 26]. Given the range of tissues in
which p53 appears to function, these compounds may prove
effective for in vitro culture of stem cells from diverse somatic
tissues. They may also have direct application to age-related
tissue deficits as well. Conversely, compounds that interfere
with the growth of the model cells when they divide with
symmetric kinetics, but not when they divide with asymmetric
kinetics, hold promise as particularly selective anticancer
agents [45].
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Authors: P Herrero-Jimenez; G Thilly; P J Southam; A Tomita-Mitchell; S Morgenthaler; E E Furth; W G Thilly Journal: Mutat Res Date: 1998-05-25 Impact factor: 2.433
Authors: Yang Hoon Huh; Minsoo Noh; Frank R Burden; Jennifer C Chen; David A Winkler; James L Sherley Journal: Stem Cell Res Date: 2015-01-06 Impact factor: 2.020
Authors: Zhen Zhao; Johannes Zuber; Ernesto Diaz-Flores; Laura Lintault; Scott C Kogan; Kevin Shannon; Scott W Lowe Journal: Genes Dev Date: 2010-07-01 Impact factor: 11.361
Authors: Sharon R Pine; Bríd M Ryan; Lyuba Varticovski; Ana I Robles; Curtis C Harris Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Date: 2010-01-13 Impact factor: 11.205