Publications by authors named "J M Flaman"

During aging and in some contexts, like embryonic development, wound healing, and diseases such as cancer, senescent cells accumulate and play a key role in different pathophysiological functions. A long-held belief was that cellular senescence decreased normal cell functions, given the loss of proliferation of senescent cells. This view radically changed following the discovery of the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP), factors released by senescent cells into their microenvironment.

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Article Synopsis
  • The ELN gene produces tropoelastin, crucial for forming elastic fibers that maintain tissue elasticity, and its decline is associated with aging and age-related diseases.
  • Decreased ELN levels in human and mouse fibroblasts lead to premature cellular senescence, but this process is linked to increased HMOX1 rather than direct elastic fiber degradation.
  • The study identifies a novel pathway where the decrease in ELN activates HMOX1 through transcription factors p53 and NRF2, resulting in iron accumulation and alterations in gene expression that promote senescence.
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Smoking is the main risk factor for many lung diseases including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Cigarette smoke (CS) contains carcinogenic and reactive oxygen species that favor DNA mutations and perturb the homeostasis and environment of cells. CS induces lung cell senescence resulting in a stable proliferation arrest and a senescence-associated secretory phenotype.

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Background: TGFβ induces several cell phenotypes including senescence, a stable cell cycle arrest accompanied by a secretory program, and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in normal epithelial cells. During carcinogenesis cells lose the ability to undergo senescence in response to TGFβ but they maintain an EMT, which can contribute to tumor progression. Our aim was to identify mechanisms promoting TGFβ-induced senescence escape.

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Cellular senescence is induced by many stresses including telomere shortening, DNA damage, oxidative, or metabolic stresses. Senescent cells are stably cell cycle arrested and they secrete many factors including cytokines and chemokines. Accumulation of senescent cells promotes many age-related alterations and diseases.

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