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SenNet recommendations for detecting senescent cells in different tissues.

Authors :
Suryadevara V
Hudgins AD
Rajesh A
Pappalardo A
Karpova A
Dey AK
Hertzel A
Agudelo A
Rocha A
Soygur B
Schilling B
Carver CM
Aguayo-Mazzucato C
Baker DJ
Bernlohr DA
Jurk D
Mangarova DB
Quardokus EM
Enninga EAL
Schmidt EL
Chen F
Duncan FE
Cambuli F
Kaur G
Kuchel GA
Lee G
Daldrup-Link HE
Martini H
Phatnani H
Al-Naggar IM
Rahman I
Nie J
Passos JF
Silverstein JC
Campisi J
Wang J
Iwasaki K
Barbosa K
Metis K
Nernekli K
Niedernhofer LJ
Ding L
Wang L
Adams LC
Ruiyang L
Doolittle ML
Teneche MG
Schafer MJ
Xu M
Hajipour M
Boroumand M
Basisty N
Sloan N
Slavov N
Kuksenko O
Robson P
Gomez PT
Vasilikos P
Adams PD
Carapeto P
Zhu Q
Ramasamy R
Perez-Lorenzo R
Fan R
Dong R
Montgomery RR
Shaikh S
Vickovic S
Yin S
Kang S
Suvakov S
Khosla S
Garovic VD
Menon V
Xu Y
Song Y
Suh Y
Dou Z
Neretti N
Source :
Nature reviews. Molecular cell biology [Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol] 2024 Jun 03. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jun 03.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

Once considered a tissue culture-specific phenomenon, cellular senescence has now been linked to various biological processes with both beneficial and detrimental roles in humans, rodents and other species. Much of our understanding of senescent cell biology still originates from tissue culture studies, where each cell in the culture is driven to an irreversible cell cycle arrest. By contrast, in tissues, these cells are relatively rare and difficult to characterize, and it is now established that fully differentiated, postmitotic cells can also acquire a senescence phenotype. The SenNet Biomarkers Working Group was formed to provide recommendations for the use of cellular senescence markers to identify and characterize senescent cells in tissues. Here, we provide recommendations for detecting senescent cells in different tissues based on a comprehensive analysis of existing literature reporting senescence markers in 14 tissues in mice and humans. We discuss some of the recent advances in detecting and characterizing cellular senescence, including molecular senescence signatures and morphological features, and the use of circulating markers. We aim for this work to be a valuable resource for both seasoned investigators in senescence-related studies and newcomers to the field.<br /> (© 2024. Springer Nature Limited.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1471-0080
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature reviews. Molecular cell biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38831121
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41580-024-00738-8