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Data from Senescent Stromal Cells Promote Cancer Resistance through SIRT1 Loss-Potentiated Overproduction of Small Extracellular Vesicles

Authors :
Yu Sun
Jing Jiang
Eric W.-F. Lam
Y. Eugene Chin
Liu Cao
Jianming Guo
Yannasittha Jiramongkol
Min Qian
Xuefeng Dou
Boyi Zhang
Qixia Xu
Shenjun Li
Qilai Long
Liu Han
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Cellular senescence is a potent tumor-suppressive program that prevents neoplastic events. Paradoxically, senescent cells develop an inflammatory secretome, termed the senescence-associated secretory phenotype, which is implicated in age-related pathologies including cancer. Here, we report that senescent cells actively synthesize and release small extracellular vesicles (sEV) with a distinctive size distribution. Mechanistically, SIRT1 loss supported accelerated sEV production despite enhanced proteome-wide ubiquitination, a process correlated with ATP6V1A downregulation and defective lysosomal acidification. Once released, senescent stromal sEVs significantly altered the expression profile of recipient cancer cells and enhanced their aggressiveness, specifically drug resistance mediated by expression of ATP-binding cassette subfamily B member 4 (ABCB4). Targeting SIRT1 with agonist SRT2104 prevented development of cancer resistance by restraining sEV production by senescent stromal cells. In clinical oncology, sEVs in peripheral blood of posttreatment cancer patients were readily detectable by routine biotechniques, presenting an exploitable biomarker to monitor therapeutic efficacy and predict long-term outcome. Together, this study identifies a distinct mechanism supporting pathologic activities of senescent cells and provides a potent avenue to circumvent advanced human malignancies by cotargeting cancer cells and their surrounding microenvironment, which contributes to drug resistance via secretion of sEVs from senescent stromal cells.Significance:Senescent stromal cells produce a large number of sEVs to promote cancer resistance in therapeutic settings, a process driven by SIRT1 decline in stromal cells and ABCB4 augmentation in cancer cells.See related commentary by Wiley, p. 3193

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0041b6a6fe69b63ff172f5497d821413