| Literature DB >> 18182995 |
Abstract
Experimental evidence suggests that ageing-associated alterations in the tissue microenvironment act to promote prostate carcinogenesis. In this review, we survey the cellular state of senescence, review its causes, and describe associations with ageing and cancer. We further discuss senescent stromal gene expression changes, which may mediate these effects, and that may serve as therapeutic targets.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18182995 PMCID: PMC2361445 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Ageing, senescence, and cellular phenotypic responses. With chronological ageing, telomere attrition leading to replicative exhaustion and/or an accumulation of environmental exposures leads to cellular senescence. DNA damage is sensed by the cell resulting in the activation of the p53–p21 and/or pRB–p16 pathways, leading to induction and maintenance of the senescent cellular state. The senescence programme consists of the robust expression of a diverse set of genes, a subset of which have the potential to alter the tissue microenvironment and promote carcinogenesis.
Figure 2The prostate microenvironment and influence of senescence on carcinogenesis. (A) The normal microenvironment involves reciprocal paracrine interactions between epithelium and constituents of the stroma (fibroblasts, smooth muscle, endothelium, matrix, and inflammatory cells (not shown)) that serve to maintain homoeostasis and a functional differentiated tissue state. Microenvironmental signalling maintains tissue homoeostasis. (B) Cellular damage in the context of chronological ageing and/or oxidative stress leads to the accumulation of senescent stromal cells, which produce paracrine-acting factors capable of inducing or promoting epithelial carcinogenesis. (C) Continued promotion of carcinogenesis by the altered microenvironment, including changes in the matrix components, contributes to invasive and metastatic epithelial cell phenotypes. Aberrant paracrine signals from initiated epithelial cells also contribute to further stromal senescence and/or the development of a reactive stroma that further influences carcinogenesis.
A concise sampling of genes with altered expression in senescence
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| CXCL12 | Stromal cell-derived factor 1 | 3.39 |
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| VEGF | Vascular endothelial growth factor | 1.44 | |
| CXCL1 | Melanoma growth stimulating activity | 3.55 | |
| IL6 | Interleukin 6 | 2.31 |
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| IL8 | Interleukin 8 | 6.76 | |
| COL4A5 | Collagen 4 | 2.34 |
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| SPARC | Osteonectin | 1.92 |
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| SPP1 | Osteopontin | 1.20 |
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| MMP2 | Matrix metalloproteinase 2 | 4.33 |
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| MMP9 | Matrix metalloproteinase 9 | 1.12 |
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| TIMP1 | Tissue inhibitor of metallopeptidase 1 | 2.65 |
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| AREG | Amphiregulin | 4.4 |
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