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Persistence and/or Senescence: Not So Lasting at Last? | LitMetric

Persistence and/or Senescence: Not So Lasting at Last?

Cancer Res

Medical Department of Hematology, Oncology and Tumor Immunology, Molekulares Krebsforschungszentrum - MKFZ, Campus Virchow Klinikum, Charité - Universitätsmedizin, Berlin, Germany.

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • Therapy-exposed surviving cancer cells can undergo significant changes in their epigenetics, making them more resilient and likely to cause aggressive relapses.
  • Ramponi and colleagues researched a specific type of cell behavior in lung cancer and melanoma, induced by mTOR/PI3K inhibitors, noting how these cells mimic some characteristics of senescent cells but lack an inflammatory response typical of those cells.
  • Their findings indicate potential weaknesses in these drug-tolerant cells and highlight challenges in studying these behaviors in laboratory settings, sparking discussions on the nature and treatment of persister cells in cancer.

Article Abstract

Therapy-exposed surviving cancer cells may have encountered profound epigenetic remodeling that renders these drug-tolerant persisters candidate drivers of particularly aggressive relapses. Typically presenting as slow-to-nongrowing cells, persisters are senescent or senescence-like cells. In this issue of Cancer Research, Ramponi and colleagues study mTOR/PI3K inhibitor-induced embryonic diapause-like arrest (DLA) as a model of persistence in lung cancer and melanoma cells and compare this persister condition with therapy-induced senescence in the same cells. The DLA phenotype recapitulated some but not all features attributed to senescent cells, lacking, for instance, an inflammatory secretome otherwise known as the senescence-associated secretory phenotype. A CRISPR dropout screen pointed to methyl group-providing one-carbon metabolism and further to H4K20me3-mediated repression of senescence-associated secretory phenotype-related IFN response genes selectively in DLA-like persister cells. Conversely, inhibition of H4K20-active KMT5B/C methyltransferases derepressed inflammatory programs and was toxic in DLA cells. These findings not only suggest exploitable vulnerabilities of DLA-like persister cells but also unveil general technical and conceptual challenges of cultured multipassage cell line-based persister studies. Collectively, the approach chosen and insights obtained will stimulate a productive scientific debate on senescence-like features and their reversibility across drug-tolerant persister cells. See related article by Ramponi et al., p. 32.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-24-3744DOI Listing

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