Beyond DNA repair and chromosome instability-Fanconi anaemia as a cellular senescence-associated syndrome.
Anne Helbling-LeclercCécile GarcinFilippo RosselliPublished in: Cell death and differentiation (2021)
Fanconi anaemia (FA) is the most frequent inherited bone marrow failure syndrome, due to mutations in genes encoding proteins involved in replication fork protection, DNA interstrand crosslink repair and replication rescue through inducing double-strand break repair and homologous recombination. Clinically, FA is characterised by aplastic anaemia, congenital defects and cancer predisposition. In in vitro studies, FA cells presented hallmarks defining senescent cells, including p53-p21 axis activation, altered telomere length, mitochondrial dysfunction, chromatin alterations, and a pro-inflammatory status. Senescence is a programme leading to proliferation arrest that is involved in different physiological contexts, such as embryogenesis, tissue remodelling and repair and guarantees tumour suppression activity. However, senescence can become a driving force for developmental abnormalities, aging and cancer. Herein, we summarise the current knowledge in the field to highlight the mutual relationships between FA and senescence that lead us to consider FA not only as a DNA repair and chromosome fragility syndrome but also as a "senescence syndrome".
Keyphrases
- dna repair
- dna damage
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- dna damage response
- bone marrow
- papillary thyroid
- case report
- endothelial cells
- cell cycle arrest
- stress induced
- healthcare
- copy number
- squamous cell
- randomized controlled trial
- signaling pathway
- young adults
- single molecule
- study protocol
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell death
- cell free
- circulating tumor
- endoplasmic reticulum stress