Postmitotic neurons develop a p21‐dependent senescence‐like phenotype driven by a DNA damage response
Newcastle University · The Open University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
In senescent cells, a DNA damage response drives not only irreversible loss of replicative capacity but also production and secretion of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and bioactive peptides including pro-inflammatory cytokines. This makes senescent cells a potential cause of tissue functional decline in aging. To our knowledge, we show here for the first time evidence suggesting that DNA damage induces a senescence-like state in mature postmitotic neurons in vivo. About 40-80% of Purkinje neurons and 20-40% of cortical, hippocampal and peripheral neurons in the myenteric plexus from old C57Bl/6 mice showed severe DNA damage, activated p38MAPkinase, high ROS production and oxidative damage, interleukin IL-6…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 9.56
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 49
Authors
11Topics & keywords
- Senescence
- DNA damage
- Biology
- Telomere
- Cell biology
- Phenotype
- Telomerase
- Oxidative stress