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Gerosuppression in confluent cells

The most physiological type of cell cycle arrest – namely, contact inhibition in dense culture - is the least densely studied. Despite cell cycle arrest, confluent cells do not become senescent. We recently described that mTOR (target of rapamycin) is inactive in contact-inhibited cells. Therefore,...

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Autores principales: Leontieva, Olga V., Blagosklonny, Mikhail V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4298362/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25585637
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author Leontieva, Olga V.
Blagosklonny, Mikhail V.
author_facet Leontieva, Olga V.
Blagosklonny, Mikhail V.
author_sort Leontieva, Olga V.
collection PubMed
description The most physiological type of cell cycle arrest – namely, contact inhibition in dense culture - is the least densely studied. Despite cell cycle arrest, confluent cells do not become senescent. We recently described that mTOR (target of rapamycin) is inactive in contact-inhibited cells. Therefore, conversion from reversible arrest to senescence (geroconversion) is suppressed. I this Perspective, we further extended the gerosuppression model. While causing senescence in regular cell density, etoposide failed to cause senescence in contact-inhibited cells. A transient reactivation of mTOR favored geroconversion in etoposide-treated confluent cells. Like p21, p16 did not cause senescence in high cell density. We discuss that suppression of geroconversion in confluent and contact-inhibited cultures mimics gerosuppression in the organism. We confirmed that levels of p-S6 were low in murine tissues in the organism compared with mouse embryonic fibroblasts in cell culture, whereas p-Akt was reciprocally high in the organism.
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spelling pubmed-42983622015-01-27 Gerosuppression in confluent cells Leontieva, Olga V. Blagosklonny, Mikhail V. Aging (Albany NY) Research Perspective The most physiological type of cell cycle arrest – namely, contact inhibition in dense culture - is the least densely studied. Despite cell cycle arrest, confluent cells do not become senescent. We recently described that mTOR (target of rapamycin) is inactive in contact-inhibited cells. Therefore, conversion from reversible arrest to senescence (geroconversion) is suppressed. I this Perspective, we further extended the gerosuppression model. While causing senescence in regular cell density, etoposide failed to cause senescence in contact-inhibited cells. A transient reactivation of mTOR favored geroconversion in etoposide-treated confluent cells. Like p21, p16 did not cause senescence in high cell density. We discuss that suppression of geroconversion in confluent and contact-inhibited cultures mimics gerosuppression in the organism. We confirmed that levels of p-S6 were low in murine tissues in the organism compared with mouse embryonic fibroblasts in cell culture, whereas p-Akt was reciprocally high in the organism. Impact Journals LLC 2014-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC4298362/ /pubmed/25585637 Text en Copyright: © 2014 Leontieva and Blagosklonny http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
spellingShingle Research Perspective
Leontieva, Olga V.
Blagosklonny, Mikhail V.
Gerosuppression in confluent cells
title Gerosuppression in confluent cells
title_full Gerosuppression in confluent cells
title_fullStr Gerosuppression in confluent cells
title_full_unstemmed Gerosuppression in confluent cells
title_short Gerosuppression in confluent cells
title_sort gerosuppression in confluent cells
topic Research Perspective
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4298362/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25585637
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