Therapy-Induced Cellular Senescence: Potentiating Tumor Elimination or Driving Cancer Resistance and Recurrence?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Senescence in the Context of Cancer
2.1. Oncogene-Induced Senescence (OIS)
2.2. Therapy-Induced Senescence (TIS)
3. Hallmarks of Cellular Senescence
3.1. The DNA Damage Response
3.2. CDK Inhibitors and Cell Cycle Arrest
3.3. Chromatin and Nuclear Changes
3.4. Resistance to Apoptosis
3.5. Dysfunctional Mitochondria
3.6. Deregulated Metabolism
3.7. Alterations in Surface Proteins
3.8. Regulation of the SASP
4. Senescence as an Ally in Cancer Treatment
4.1. Senescence as a Barrier to Tumorigenesis
4.2. Senescence-Associated Growth Arrest in Cancer
4.3. Innate Immune Responses Activated by SnCs
4.4. Activation of Adaptive Immune Responses by SnCs
Senescence Induction Methods | Cancer Type | Affected Immune Cell Population |
---|---|---|
H-RasG12V and p53 reactivation | Liver cancer | PMN [27] |
Alisertib | Melanoma | PMN and macrophages [242] |
Carbon tetrachloride | Hepatocellular carcinoma | M1 macrophage [243] |
Temozolomide | Glioblastoma | Increased M1 macrophages and decreased MDSCs [244] |
IR | Lung cancer | M1 macrophages [245] |
Cyclophosphamide | B cell lymphoma | NK cells [199] |
H-RasG12V | Liver cancer | NK cells [246] |
Chemo agents | multiple myeloma | NK cells [247] |
Doxorubicin | multiple myeloma | NK cells [248] |
Trametinib + Palbociclib | KP lung cancer | NK cells [251] |
N-RasG12D | Liver cancer | NK cells [119] |
Trametinib + Palbociclib + Tazemetostat | PDAC (KPC model) | NK and T cells [252] |
N-RasG12V | Liver cancer | CD4+ T cells [29] |
IR | Osteosarcomas | NKT cells [257] |
Alisertib | Melanoma | CD8+ T cells [259] |
Dexamethasone | Lung adenocarcinoma | NK and T cells [258] |
Abemaciclib | Mammary carcinoma | T cells [261] |
N-RasQ61K or B-RafV600E | Primary melanocytes | T cells [174] |
Cytarabine or Palbociclib | AML | T cells [262] |
Doxorubicin | Melanoma | DCs and T cells [254] |
IR + veliparib | Multiple cancers | DCs, NK, and T cells [26,256] |
N-RasG12D | Liver cancer | Increased CD8+ T cells and decreased MDSCs [255] |
Doxorubicin | Metastatic breast cancer | CD8+ T cell [263] |
Trametinib + Palbociclib | PDAC (KPC model) | CD8+ T cells [264] |
Abemaciclib | Melanoma | T cells [265] |
AZD1152 | Melanoma | T cells [266] |
Irinotecan + Cisplatin | Ovarian cancer | DCs and T cells [267] |
IFN-γ | Multiple cancers | T cells [268] |
4.5. Senescence as a Strategy to Overcome an Immunosuppressive Tumor Microenvironment
4.6. Immunogenic Senescent Tumor Cells Function as Cancer Vaccines
5. Senescence as an Enemy in Cancer Treatment
5.1. Impacts of Senescence on Malignant Transformation and Tumor Growth
Senescence Induction Methods | Cancer Type | Immunotherapy Agent |
---|---|---|
Mitoxantrone | Prostate cancer | α-PD-1/PD-L1 Ab [275] |
Doxorubicin | Melanoma | α-PD-L2 Ab [37] |
Alisertib | Melanoma | α-CD137 Ab [259] |
Abemaciclib | Mammary carcinoma | α-PD-L1 Ab [261] |
IR + Veliparib | Multiple cancers | α-PD-L1 Ab [256] |
Doxorubicin | Metastatic breast cancer | α-PD-1 Ab [263] |
Trametinib + Palbociclib | PDAC (KPC model) | α-PD-1 Ab [264] |
Abemaciclib | Melanoma | α-CTLA4 Ab [265] |
AZD1152 | Melanoma | α-CTLA4 Ab [266] |
Irinotecan + Cisplatin | Ovarian cancer | α-PD-1 Ab [267] |
5.2. Senescent Cell Effects on Invasion and Metastasis
5.3. Stimulation of Therapy Resistance via Promoting Survival, Dormancy, EMT, and Stemness
5.4. Senescence-Induced Immunosuppression and Strategies for Improved Cancer Treatment
Senescence Induction Methods | Cancer Type | Affected Immune Cell Population |
---|---|---|
Docetaxel | PTEN loss prostate cancer | Increase Gr1+ MDSCs but decrease T and NK cells [304] |
p27Kip1 | Squamous cell carcinoma | Increase CD11b+Ly6GHi MDSCs and Tregs [306] |
Palbociclib | Melanoma | Promote the recruitment of Gr1+ MDCS [307] |
Pten-loss | PTEN loss prostate cancer | Increase MDSCs [308] |
N-RasG12V | Liver cancer | Increase MDSCs [309] |
N-RasG12V | Liver cancer | Reduce CD3+ T cells [178] |
IR | Lung metastases | Promote Ly6G+ neutrophil recruitment [310] |
TGF-β | Lung cancer | Increase infiltration of immune-suppressive cell types [311] |
ROS | Colorectal Cancer | Enhance M2 macrophage polarization [312] |
Temozolomide | Melanoma | Suppress tumor immune infiltrates [313] |
Metabolites (DCA and LTA) | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Suppress CD8+ T cells [314] |
Mitoxantrone | Prostate cancer | Promote PD-L1 expression in tumors [275] |
Doxorubicin | Melanoma | PD-L2+ senescent cells dampen T cell activity and promote CD11b+Gr1+ MDSC recruitment [37] |
H-RasG12V | Glioblastoma | Decrease T cells and increase tumor-promoting macrophages [303] |
Palbociclib | Pancreatic carcinoma | Inhibit macrophage phagocytosis and efferocytosis [176] |
5.5. Lifestyle Interventions to Influence Metabolism and Modulate Senescence
5.6. “One-Two Punch” Therapies Using Senolytics against Cancer
MOA | Senolytic Agent | Senescence Induction Methods | Cancer Type |
---|---|---|---|
Tyrosine kinase inhibitor + flavonoid derivative | Dasatinib and quercetin | Doxorubicin | Liver Cancer [347] |
Flavonoid derivative | Fisetin | Olaparib | Ovarian cancer [333] |
GL-V9 | Doxorubicin | Breast cancer [346] | |
Bcl-2/Bcl-xL/Bcl-w inhibitor | ABT263 | Doxorubicin or etoposide | Lung and breast cancer [331] |
ABT263 | SMARCB1 inhibition | Multiple cancer cell lines [329] | |
ABT263 | Olaparib | Ovarian [333] | |
ABT263 | Doxorubicin | Breast cancer [332] | |
ABT263 | Radiation and temozolomide | Glioblastoma [328] | |
ABT737 | K-RasG12V | Pancreatic cancer [330] | |
Selective Bcl-xL inhibitor | A1331852, A1155463 | Radiation and temozolomide | Glioblastoma cell lines [328] |
Selective Bcl-2 inhibitor | ABT199 | IR | Sarcoma cell lines [338] |
ABT199 | Palbociclib + fulvestrant | Breast cancer [339] | |
MCL-1 inhibitor | S63845 | Doxorubicin or etoposide | Breast cancer [332] |
S63845 | Docetaxel | Prostate cancer [340] | |
Galacto-conjugation of ABT263 | Nav-Gal | Cisplatin | A549 xenograft [334] |
Nav-Gal | Palbociclib | Breast cancer lung metastasis | |
BET degrader | ARV825 | High-fat diet or doxorubicin | Liver cancer [348] |
Cardiac glycosides | Digoxin Digitoxin Proscillaridin A Ouabain | Therapy induced senescence | Multiple cancer types [349,350] |
mTOR inhibitor | AZD8055 | CDC7 inhibitor XL413 | Hepatocellular carcinoma [341] |
HDAC inhibitor | Panobinostat Decrease Bcl-xl | Taxol, cisplatin | NSCLC and HNSCC [342] |
Senolytic peptide | FOXO4-binding peptide ES2 | BRAF inhibitor Dabrafenib | Melanoma [354] |
Senolytic CAR-T | uPAR-specific CAR-T cells | Trametinib + Palbociclib | Lung cancer [21] |
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Liu, Y.; Lomeli, I.; Kron, S.J. Therapy-Induced Cellular Senescence: Potentiating Tumor Elimination or Driving Cancer Resistance and Recurrence? Cells 2024, 13, 1281. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells13151281
Liu Y, Lomeli I, Kron SJ. Therapy-Induced Cellular Senescence: Potentiating Tumor Elimination or Driving Cancer Resistance and Recurrence? Cells. 2024; 13(15):1281. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells13151281
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiu, Yue, Isabelle Lomeli, and Stephen J. Kron. 2024. "Therapy-Induced Cellular Senescence: Potentiating Tumor Elimination or Driving Cancer Resistance and Recurrence?" Cells 13, no. 15: 1281. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells13151281
APA StyleLiu, Y., Lomeli, I., & Kron, S. J. (2024). Therapy-Induced Cellular Senescence: Potentiating Tumor Elimination or Driving Cancer Resistance and Recurrence? Cells, 13(15), 1281. https://doi.org/10.3390/cells13151281