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Inflammation and DNA damage: cause, effect or both

Authors :
Antonio Pezone
Fabiola Olivieri
Maria Vittoria Napoli
Antonio Procopio
Enrico Vittorio Avvedimento
Armando Gabrielli
Pezone, Antonio
Olivieri, Fabiola
Vittoria Napoli, Maria
Procopio, Antonio
Vittorio Avvedimento, Enrico
Gabrielli, Armando
Source :
Nature Reviews Rheumatology. 19:200-211
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Inflammation is a biological response involving immune cells, blood vessels and mediators induced by endogenous and exogenous stimuli, such as pathogens, damaged cells or chemicals. Unresolved (chronic) inflammation is characterized by the secretion of cytokines that maintain inflammation and redox stress. Mitochondrial or nuclear redox imbalance induces DNA damage, which triggers the DNA damage response (DDR) that is orchestrated by ATM and ATR kinases, which modify gene expression and metabolism and, eventually, establish the senescent phenotype. DDR-mediated senescence is induced by the signalling proteins p53, p16 and p21, which arrest the cell cycle in G1 or G2 and promote cytokine secretion, producing the senescence-associated secretory phenotype. Senescence and inflammation phenotypes are intimately associated, but highly heterogeneous because they vary according to the cell type that is involved. The vicious cycle of inflammation, DNA damage and DDR-mediated senescence, along with the constitutive activation of the immune system, is the core of an evolutionarily conserved circuitry, which arrests the cell cycle to reduce the accumulation of mutations generated by DNA replication during redox stress caused by infection or inflammation. Evidence suggests that specific organ dysfunctions in apparently unrelated diseases of autoimmune, rheumatic, degenerative and vascular origins are caused by inflammation resulting from DNA damage-induced senescence.

Subjects

Subjects :
Rheumatology

Details

ISSN :
17594804 and 17594790
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Reviews Rheumatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bea8a7b5979132cf796e9f357838a49b