Publication | Open Access
Aging Yeast Cells Undergo a Sharp Entry into Senescence Unrelated to the Loss of Mitochondrial Membrane Potential
124
Citations
37
References
2013
Year
AgingMolecular BiologyCell BiophysicsBiogerontologyMother CellCellular PhysiologyLongevityAutophagyMitochondrial Membrane PotentialLifespan ExtensionCell DivisionProductive AgingCell EngineeringCell BiologyYeast Cells UndergoMicrofluidic DeviceMitochondrial DynamicsCellular SenescenceSystems BiologyMedicineOrganelle DynamicSharp EntryOrganelle Biology
In budding yeast, a mother cell can produce a finite number of daughter cells before it stops dividing and dies. Such entry into senescence is thought to result from a progressive decline in physiological function, including a loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨ). Here, we developed a microfluidic device to monitor the dynamics of cell division and ΔΨ in real time at single-cell resolution. We show that cells do not enter senescence gradually but rather undergo an abrupt transition to a slowly dividing state. Moreover, we demonstrate that the decline in ΔΨ, which is observed only in a fraction of cells, is not responsible for entry into senescence. Rather, the loss of ΔΨ is an age-independent and heritable process that leads to clonal senescence and is therefore incompatible with daughter cell rejuvenation. These results emphasize the importance of quantitative single-cell measurements to decipher the causes of cellular aging.
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