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Plasma membrane damage limits replicative lifespan in yeast and induces premature senescence in human fibroblasts.

Authors :
Suda K
Moriyama Y
Razali N
Chiu Y
Masukagami Y
Nishimura K
Barbee H
Takase H
Sugiyama S
Yamazaki Y
Sato Y
Higashiyama T
Johmura Y
Nakanishi M
Kono K
Source :
Nature aging [Nat Aging] 2024 Mar; Vol. 4 (3), pp. 319-335. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Feb 22.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Plasma membrane damage (PMD) occurs in all cell types due to environmental perturbation and cell-autonomous activities. However, cellular outcomes of PMD remain largely unknown except for recovery or death. In this study, using budding yeast and normal human fibroblasts, we found that cellular senescence-stable cell cycle arrest contributing to organismal aging-is the long-term outcome of PMD. Our genetic screening using budding yeast unexpectedly identified a close genetic association between PMD response and replicative lifespan regulations. Furthermore, PMD limits replicative lifespan in budding yeast; upregulation of membrane repair factors ESCRT-III (SNF7) and AAA-ATPase (VPS4) extends it. In normal human fibroblasts, PMD induces premature senescence via the Ca <superscript>2+</superscript> -p53 axis but not the major senescence pathway, DNA damage response pathway. Transient upregulation of ESCRT-III (CHMP4B) suppressed PMD-dependent senescence. Together with mRNA sequencing results, our study highlights an underappreciated but ubiquitous senescent cell subtype: PMD-dependent senescent cells.<br /> (© 2024. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2662-8465
Volume :
4
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature aging
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38388781
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43587-024-00575-6