Tumor growth fueled by spurious senescence phenotypes.
Michalis MastriJohn M L EbosPublished in: Molecular & cellular oncology (2019)
Cancer treatments can induce a form of senescence that halts cellular division while allowing continued secretion of tumor-promoting proteins. We recently found that antiangiogenic treatment resistance can lead to a transient hijacking of the senescence-controlled secretory machinery that, when therapeutically targeted during treatment cessation, can blunt rebound tumor growth.