Senescent cells accumulate in tissues during aging or pathological settings. The semi-genetic or pharmacological targeting of senescent cells revealed that cellular senescence underlies many aspects of the aging-associated phenotype and diseases. We previously reported that cellular senescence contributes to aging- and disease-associated pulmonary dysfunction. We herein report that the elimination of -expressing cells ameliorates cigarette smoke-induced lung pathologies in mice. Cigarette smoke induced the expression of and in lung tissue with concomitant increases in lung tissue compliance and alveolar airspace. The elimination of -expressing cells prior to cigarette smoke exposure protected against these changes. Furthermore, the administration of cigarette smoke extract lead to pulmonary dysfunction, which was ameliorated by subsequent senescent cell elimination. Collectively, these results suggest that senescent cells are a potential therapeutic target for cigarette smoking-associated lung disease.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7175375PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom10030462DOI Listing

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