Back to Search Start Over

Myc Supports Self-Renewal of Basal Cells in the Esophageal Epithelium

Authors :
Tomoaki Hishida
Eric Vazquez-Ferrer
Yuriko Hishida-Nozaki
Yuto Takemoto
Fumiyuki Hatanaka
Kei Yoshida
Javier Prieto
Sanjeeb Kumar Sahu
Yuta Takahashi
Pradeep Reddy
David D. O’Keefe
Concepcion Rodriguez Esteban
Paul S. Knoepfler
Estrella Nuñez Delicado
Antoni Castells
Josep M. Campistol
Ryuji Kato
Hiroshi Nakagawa
Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte
Source :
Frontiers in cell and developmental biology. 10
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

It is widely believed that cellular senescence plays a critical role in both aging and cancer, and that senescence is a fundamental, permanent growth arrest that somatic cells cannot avoid. Here we show that Myc plays an important role in self-renewal of esophageal epithelial cells, contributing to their resistance to cellular senescence. Myc is homogeneously expressed in basal cells of the esophageal epithelium and Myc positively regulates their self-renewal by maintaining their undifferentiated state. Indeed, Myc knockout induced a loss of the undifferentiated state of esophageal epithelial cells resulting in cellular senescence while forced MYC expression promoted oncogenic cell proliferation. A superoxide scavenger counteracted Myc knockout-induced senescence, therefore suggesting that a mitochondrial superoxide takes part in inducing senescence. Taken together, these analyses reveal extremely low levels of cellular senescence and senescence-associated phenotypes in the esophageal epithelium, as well as a critical role for Myc in self-renewal of basal cells in this organ. This provides new avenues for studying and understanding the links between stemness and resistance to cellular senescence.

Details

ISSN :
2296634X
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in cell and developmental biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....05757afc9c3e8b139e66c62605f8d30b