학술논문

Targetable mechanisms driving immunoevasion of persistent senescent cells link chemotherapy-resistant cancer to aging
Document Type
article
Source
JCI Insight. 5(14)
Subject
Cancer
Aging
Aetiology
5.1 Pharmaceuticals
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Animals
Antineoplastic Agents
Biopsy
Breast
Breast Neoplasms
Cell Line
Tumor
Cellular Senescence
Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p16
DNA Damage
Datasets as Topic
Drug Resistance
Neoplasm
Female
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Expression Regulation
Neoplastic
Humans
Immunologic Surveillance
Male
Metalloendopeptidases
Mice
NK Cell Lectin-Like Receptor Subfamily K
Prostate
Prostatic Neoplasms
Tissue Array Analysis
Tumor Escape
Tumor Microenvironment
Cellular senescence
Oncology
Proteases
Tumor suppressors
Language
Abstract
Cellular senescence is a tumor suppressive mechanism that can paradoxically contribute to aging pathologies. Despite evidence of immune clearance in mouse models, it is not known how senescent cells (SnCs) persist and accumulate with age or in tumors in individuals. Here, we identify cooperative mechanisms that orchestrate the immunoevasion and persistence of normal and cancer human SnCs through extracellular targeting of natural killer receptor signaling. Damaged SnCs avoid immune recognition through MMPs-dependent shedding of NKG2D-ligands reinforced via paracrine suppression of NKG2D receptor-mediated immunosurveillance. These coordinated immunoediting processes are evident in residual, drug-resistant tumors from cohorts of >700 prostate and breast cancer patients treated with senescence-inducing genotoxic chemotherapies. Unlike in mice, these reversible senescence-subversion mechanisms are independent of p53/p16 and exacerbated in oncogenic RAS-induced senescence. Critically, the p16INK4A tumor suppressor can disengage the senescence growth arrest from the damage-associated immune senescence program, which is manifest in benign nevi lesions where indolent SnCs accumulate over time and preserve a non-pro-inflammatory tissue microenvironment maintaining NKG2D-mediated immunosurveillance. Our study shows how subpopulations of SnCs elude immunosurveillance, and reveals secretome-targeted therapeutic strategies to selectively eliminate -and restore the clearance of- the detrimental SnCs that actively persist after chemotherapy and accumulate at sites of aging pathologies.