| Literature DB >> 18349844 |
Ja Ewald1, Ja Desotelle, N Almassi, Df Jarrard.
Abstract
Senescence is a distinct cellular response induced by DNA-damaging agents and other sublethal stressors and may provide novel benefits in cancer therapy. However, in an ageing model, senescent fibroblasts were found to stimulate the proliferation of cocultured cells. To address whether senescence induction in cancer cells using chemotherapy induces similar effects, we used GFP-labelled prostate cancer cell lines and monitored their proliferation in the presence of proliferating or doxorubicin-induced senescent cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. Here, we show that the presence of senescent cancer cells increased the proliferation of cocultured cells in vitro through paracrine signalling factors, but this proliferative effect was significantly less than that seen with senescent fibroblasts. In vivo, senescent cancer cells failed to increase the establishment, growth or proliferation of LNCaP and DU145 xenografts in nude mice. Senescent cells persisted as long as 5 weeks in tumours. Our results demonstrate that although drug-induced senescent cancer cells stimulate the proliferation of bystander cells in vitro, this does not significantly alter the growth of tumours in vivo. Coupled with clinical observations, these data suggest that the proliferative bystander effects of senescent cancer cells are negligible and support the further development of senescence induction as therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18349844 PMCID: PMC2359629 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604288
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Proliferative bystander effect of drug-induced senescent prostate cancer cells in vitro. (A) Bright-field images of DU145 cells cultured on cover slips ±25 nM doxorubicin (DOX) for 3 days, fixed and stained for SA β-gal activity (400 ×). (B) Number of proliferating DU145-GFP(+)or LNCaP-GFP(+) cells after coculture with proliferating or senescent non-tagged cancer cells measured by flow cytometry. Replicate results were averaged from four independent experiments. These results represent the average fold increase of cell numbers in senescent cocultures relative to proliferative cell data. Error bars represent standard error (*P<0.0001; **P=0.022). (C) BrdU+ incorporation in cells after direct coculture (left) and in transwells (right) after 30 min incubation with 20 uM BrdU. The results of three independent experiments were averaged and the numbers of cells from senescent cocultures were normalised to that of proliferating cocultures. Error bars represent standard error (*P=0.003, **P<0.0001).
Figure 2Bystander proliferation induced to a greater extent by replicatively senescent prostate fibroblasts than senescent prostate cancer cells. (A) Number of proliferating DU145-GFP(+) cells cocultured with proliferating or senescent DU145 cells or three independent primary prostate fibroblast cell lines after passage to replicative senescence. Data from all three senescent fibroblast lines were averaged. Results are expressed relative to proliferating coculture data. Error bars represent standard error (*P<0.01). Results are representative of two experiments. (B) Expression of secreted growth factor genes reported in chemically induced senescent prostate cancer cells and senescent fibroblast (1Schwarze et al, 2005 Neoplasia; 2Bavik et al, 2006. Canc. Res. *Increased gene expression confirmed in senescent cancer cells by quantitative RT-PCR in the present study).
Figure 3Xenograft tumour growth is not promoted by senescent DU145 cells. (A) Average size (left) and natural log of tumour size (right) of prostate xenograft tumours established using DU145-GFP(+) cells (0.5 × 106) mixed with an equal number proliferating (Pro+Pro) or senescent (Pro+Sen) cells and measured for 5 weeks. Error bars represent standard error (*P<0.001). Fit equations: (left) (Pro+Pro): y=5.491e0.913 (R2=0.996); (Pro+Sen): y=1.362e1.039 (R2=0.981); (right) (Pro+Pro): y=0.917x+1.565 (R2=0.989); (Pro+Sen): y=0.813x+1.340 (R2=0.997). (B) Average size (left) and natural log of tumour size (right) of prostate xenograft tumours established using DU145 (0.5 × 106) cells alone (Pro only) or with an equal number of additional senescent GFP(+)-DU145 cells (Pro+Sen). Error bars represent standard error. Fit equations: (left)(Pro only): y=0.739e1.491 (R2=0.999); (Pro+Sen): y=0.576e1.417 (R2=0.994); (right)(Pro only): y=1.41x−0.458 (R2=0.994); (Pro+Sen): y=1.254x−0.527 (R2=0.966). (C) Xenograft tumour section containing a senescent GFP(+)-DU145 cell. Hoechst 33342 (blue) was used to stain nuclei and anti-IGF2 (red) was used to stain cytoplasm (400 ×). This image is representative of sections from 10 xenograft tumours containing 1–4 GFP(+) cells per section (mean: 1 hpf).