Selective pericentromeric heterochromatin dismantling caused by TP53 activation during senescence.
Aaron Mendez-BermudezLiudmyla LototskaMelanie PousseFlorent TessierOlivier CroceChrysa M LatrickVeronica CherdyntsevaJoe NassourJiang XiaohuaYiming LuCorinne AbbadieSarantis GagosJing YeEric GilsonPublished in: Nucleic acids research (2022)
Cellular senescence triggers various types of heterochromatin remodeling that contribute to aging. However, the age-related mechanisms that lead to these epigenetic alterations remain elusive. Here, we asked how two key aging hallmarks, telomere shortening and constitutive heterochromatin loss, are mechanistically connected during senescence. We show that, at the onset of senescence, pericentromeric heterochromatin is specifically dismantled consisting of chromatin decondensation, accumulation of DNA breakages, illegitimate recombination and loss of DNA. This process is caused by telomere shortening or genotoxic stress by a sequence of events starting from TP53-dependent downregulation of the telomere protective protein TRF2. The resulting loss of TRF2 at pericentromeres triggers DNA breaks activating ATM, which in turn leads to heterochromatin decondensation by releasing KAP1 and Lamin B1, recombination and satellite DNA excision found in the cytosol associated with cGAS. This TP53-TRF2 axis activates the interferon response and the formation of chromosome rearrangements when the cells escape the senescent growth arrest. Overall, these results reveal the role of TP53 as pericentromeric disassembler and define the basic principles of how a TP53-dependent senescence inducer hierarchically leads to selective pericentromeric dismantling through the downregulation of TRF2.
Keyphrases
- dna damage
- circulating tumor
- dna repair
- endothelial cells
- cell free
- single molecule
- stress induced
- signaling pathway
- oxidative stress
- induced apoptosis
- cell proliferation
- dna methylation
- nucleic acid
- immune response
- circulating tumor cells
- copy number
- cell death
- fluorescent probe
- cell cycle
- sensitive detection
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- dna damage response
- heat stress