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Senolytic Flavonoids Enhance Type-I and Type-II Cell Death in Human Radioresistant Colon Cancer Cells through AMPK/MAPK Pathway

SIMPLE SUMMARY: The role of autophagy and senescence in cancer resistance to ionizing radiation as a response to genotoxic stress is still only partially explored. The flavonoids quercetin and fisetin have previously been shown to sensitize cancer cells resistant to radiotherapy by targeting p16(INK...

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Autores principales: Russo, Maria, Moccia, Stefania, Luongo, Diomira, Russo, Gian Luigi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10177236/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37174126
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15092660
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author Russo, Maria
Moccia, Stefania
Luongo, Diomira
Russo, Gian Luigi
author_facet Russo, Maria
Moccia, Stefania
Luongo, Diomira
Russo, Gian Luigi
author_sort Russo, Maria
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: The role of autophagy and senescence in cancer resistance to ionizing radiation as a response to genotoxic stress is still only partially explored. The flavonoids quercetin and fisetin have previously been shown to sensitize cancer cells resistant to radiotherapy by targeting p16(INK4) and p21(Kip1). Here, we examined their ability to modulate autophagy and senescence-associated inflammatory markers after irradiation in radioresistant cells. Quercetin or fisetin, in association with ionizing radiation, significantly activated AMPK and decreased ERK kinase activity, which was linked to autophagic stress response and apoptosis induction. In simple words, on one side, the combined treatment favored the induction of autophagy and senescence by activating AMPK; on the other side, it lowered the threshold for cell death and induced lethal autophagy and apoptosis by inhibiting the ERK pathway. ABSTRACT: Resistance to cancer therapies remains a clinical challenge and an unsolved problem. In a previous study, we characterized a new colon cancer cell line, namely HT500, derived from human HT29 cells and resistant to clinically relevant levels of ionizing radiation (IR). Here, we explored the effects of two natural flavonoids, quercetin (Q) and fisetin (F), well-known senolytic agents that inhibit genotoxic stress by selectively removing senescent cells. We hypothesized that the biochemical mechanisms responsible for the radiosensitising effects of these natural senolytics could intercept multiple biochemical pathways of signal transduction correlated to cell death resistance. Radioresistant HT500 cells modulate autophagic flux differently than HT29 cells and secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-8), commonly associated with senescence-related secretory phenotypes (SASP). Q and F inhibit PI(3)K/AKT and ERK pathways, which promote p16(INK4) stability and resistance to apoptosis, but they also activate AMPK and ULK kinases in response to autophagic stress at an early stage. In summary, the combination of natural senolytics and IR activates two forms of cell death: apoptosis correlated to the inhibition of ERKs and lethal autophagy dependent on AMPK kinase. Our study confirms that senescence and autophagy partially overlap, share common modulatory pathways, and reveal how senolytic flavonoids can play an important role in these processes.
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spelling pubmed-101772362023-05-13 Senolytic Flavonoids Enhance Type-I and Type-II Cell Death in Human Radioresistant Colon Cancer Cells through AMPK/MAPK Pathway Russo, Maria Moccia, Stefania Luongo, Diomira Russo, Gian Luigi Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: The role of autophagy and senescence in cancer resistance to ionizing radiation as a response to genotoxic stress is still only partially explored. The flavonoids quercetin and fisetin have previously been shown to sensitize cancer cells resistant to radiotherapy by targeting p16(INK4) and p21(Kip1). Here, we examined their ability to modulate autophagy and senescence-associated inflammatory markers after irradiation in radioresistant cells. Quercetin or fisetin, in association with ionizing radiation, significantly activated AMPK and decreased ERK kinase activity, which was linked to autophagic stress response and apoptosis induction. In simple words, on one side, the combined treatment favored the induction of autophagy and senescence by activating AMPK; on the other side, it lowered the threshold for cell death and induced lethal autophagy and apoptosis by inhibiting the ERK pathway. ABSTRACT: Resistance to cancer therapies remains a clinical challenge and an unsolved problem. In a previous study, we characterized a new colon cancer cell line, namely HT500, derived from human HT29 cells and resistant to clinically relevant levels of ionizing radiation (IR). Here, we explored the effects of two natural flavonoids, quercetin (Q) and fisetin (F), well-known senolytic agents that inhibit genotoxic stress by selectively removing senescent cells. We hypothesized that the biochemical mechanisms responsible for the radiosensitising effects of these natural senolytics could intercept multiple biochemical pathways of signal transduction correlated to cell death resistance. Radioresistant HT500 cells modulate autophagic flux differently than HT29 cells and secrete pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-8), commonly associated with senescence-related secretory phenotypes (SASP). Q and F inhibit PI(3)K/AKT and ERK pathways, which promote p16(INK4) stability and resistance to apoptosis, but they also activate AMPK and ULK kinases in response to autophagic stress at an early stage. In summary, the combination of natural senolytics and IR activates two forms of cell death: apoptosis correlated to the inhibition of ERKs and lethal autophagy dependent on AMPK kinase. Our study confirms that senescence and autophagy partially overlap, share common modulatory pathways, and reveal how senolytic flavonoids can play an important role in these processes. MDPI 2023-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10177236/ /pubmed/37174126 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15092660 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Russo, Maria
Moccia, Stefania
Luongo, Diomira
Russo, Gian Luigi
Senolytic Flavonoids Enhance Type-I and Type-II Cell Death in Human Radioresistant Colon Cancer Cells through AMPK/MAPK Pathway
title Senolytic Flavonoids Enhance Type-I and Type-II Cell Death in Human Radioresistant Colon Cancer Cells through AMPK/MAPK Pathway
title_full Senolytic Flavonoids Enhance Type-I and Type-II Cell Death in Human Radioresistant Colon Cancer Cells through AMPK/MAPK Pathway
title_fullStr Senolytic Flavonoids Enhance Type-I and Type-II Cell Death in Human Radioresistant Colon Cancer Cells through AMPK/MAPK Pathway
title_full_unstemmed Senolytic Flavonoids Enhance Type-I and Type-II Cell Death in Human Radioresistant Colon Cancer Cells through AMPK/MAPK Pathway
title_short Senolytic Flavonoids Enhance Type-I and Type-II Cell Death in Human Radioresistant Colon Cancer Cells through AMPK/MAPK Pathway
title_sort senolytic flavonoids enhance type-i and type-ii cell death in human radioresistant colon cancer cells through ampk/mapk pathway
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10177236/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37174126
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15092660
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