Publication | Open Access
CENP-A Reduction Induces a p53-Dependent Cellular Senescence Response To Protect Cells from Executing Defective Mitoses
102
Citations
56
References
2010
Year
Cell DeathChromosome IntegrityEpigeneticsTumor BiologyCell RegulationDefective MitosesCell SignalingLifespan ExtensionGenome InstabilityCell DivisionCell BiologyChromatinDevelopmental BiologyChromatin StructureChromatin RemodelingCellular SenescencePremature SenescenceTumor SuppressorMedicineCenp-a Reduction
Cellular senescence is an irreversible growth arrest and is presumed to be a natural barrier to tumor development. Like telomere shortening, certain defects in chromosome integrity can trigger senescence; however, the roles of centromere proteins in regulating commitment to the senescent state remains to be established. We examined chromatin structure in senescent human primary fibroblasts and found that CENP-A protein levels are diminished in senescent cells. Senescence-associated reduction of CENP-A is caused by transcriptional and posttranslational control. Surprisingly, forced reduction of CENP-A by short-hairpin RNA was found to cause premature senescence in human primary fibroblasts. This premature senescence is dependent on a tumor suppressor, p53, but not on p16(INK4a)-Rb; the depletion of CENP-A in p53-deficient cells results in aberrant mitosis with chromosome missegregation. We propose that p53-dependent senescence that arises from CENP-A reduction acts as a "self-defense mechanism" to prevent centromere-defective cells from undergoing mitotic proliferation that potentially leads to massive generation of aneuploid cells.
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