Bacterial Intoxication Evokes Cellular Senescence with Persistent DNA Damage and Cytokine Signaling

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Bacterial Intoxication Evokes Cellular Senescence with Persistent DNA Damage and Cytokine Signaling. / Blazkova, Hana; Krejcikova, Katerina; Moudry, Pavel; Frisan, Teresa; Hodny, Zdenek; Bartek, Jiri.

In: Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, 2009.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Blazkova, H, Krejcikova, K, Moudry, P, Frisan, T, Hodny, Z & Bartek, J 2009, 'Bacterial Intoxication Evokes Cellular Senescence with Persistent DNA Damage and Cytokine Signaling', Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1582-4934.2009.00862.x

APA

Blazkova, H., Krejcikova, K., Moudry, P., Frisan, T., Hodny, Z., & Bartek, J. (2009). Bacterial Intoxication Evokes Cellular Senescence with Persistent DNA Damage and Cytokine Signaling. Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1582-4934.2009.00862.x

Vancouver

Blazkova H, Krejcikova K, Moudry P, Frisan T, Hodny Z, Bartek J. Bacterial Intoxication Evokes Cellular Senescence with Persistent DNA Damage and Cytokine Signaling. Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine. 2009. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1582-4934.2009.00862.x

Author

Blazkova, Hana ; Krejcikova, Katerina ; Moudry, Pavel ; Frisan, Teresa ; Hodny, Zdenek ; Bartek, Jiri. / Bacterial Intoxication Evokes Cellular Senescence with Persistent DNA Damage and Cytokine Signaling. In: Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine. 2009.

Bibtex

@article{db6cb480333211df8ed1000ea68e967b,
title = "Bacterial Intoxication Evokes Cellular Senescence with Persistent DNA Damage and Cytokine Signaling",
abstract = "Cytolethal distending toxins (CDTs) are proteins produced and secreted by facultative pathogenic strains of Gram-negative bacteria with potentially genotoxic effects. Mammalian cells exposed to CDTs undergo cell type-dependent cell-cycle arrest or apoptosis; however the cell fate responses to such intoxication are mechanistically incompletely understood. Here we show that both normal and cancer cells (BJ, IMR-90 and WI-38 fibroblasts, HeLa and U2-OS cell lines) that survive the acute phase of intoxication by Haemophilus ducreyi CDT possess the hallmarks of cellular senescence. This characteristic phenotype included persistently activated DNA damage signaling (detected as 53BP1/gammaH2AX-positive foci), enhanced senescence-associated beta-galactosidase activity, expansion of PML nuclear compartments, and induced expression of several cytokines (especially interleukins IL-6, IL-8 and IL-24), overall features shared by cells undergoing replicative or premature cellular senescence. We conclude that analogous to oncogenic, oxidative and replicative stresses, bacterial intoxication represents another pathophysiological stimulus that induces premature senescence, an intrinsic cellular response that may mechanistically underlie the 'distended' morphology evoked by CDTs. Finally, the activation of the two anti-cancer barriers, apoptosis and cellular senescence, together with evidence of chromosomal aberrations (micronucleation) reported here, support the emerging genotoxic and potentially oncogenic effects of this group of bacterial toxins, and warrant further investigation of their role(s) in human disease.",
author = "Hana Blazkova and Katerina Krejcikova and Pavel Moudry and Teresa Frisan and Zdenek Hodny and Jiri Bartek",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1111/j.1582-4934.2009.00862.x",
language = "English",
journal = "Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine",
issn = "1582-1838",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Bacterial Intoxication Evokes Cellular Senescence with Persistent DNA Damage and Cytokine Signaling

AU - Blazkova, Hana

AU - Krejcikova, Katerina

AU - Moudry, Pavel

AU - Frisan, Teresa

AU - Hodny, Zdenek

AU - Bartek, Jiri

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Cytolethal distending toxins (CDTs) are proteins produced and secreted by facultative pathogenic strains of Gram-negative bacteria with potentially genotoxic effects. Mammalian cells exposed to CDTs undergo cell type-dependent cell-cycle arrest or apoptosis; however the cell fate responses to such intoxication are mechanistically incompletely understood. Here we show that both normal and cancer cells (BJ, IMR-90 and WI-38 fibroblasts, HeLa and U2-OS cell lines) that survive the acute phase of intoxication by Haemophilus ducreyi CDT possess the hallmarks of cellular senescence. This characteristic phenotype included persistently activated DNA damage signaling (detected as 53BP1/gammaH2AX-positive foci), enhanced senescence-associated beta-galactosidase activity, expansion of PML nuclear compartments, and induced expression of several cytokines (especially interleukins IL-6, IL-8 and IL-24), overall features shared by cells undergoing replicative or premature cellular senescence. We conclude that analogous to oncogenic, oxidative and replicative stresses, bacterial intoxication represents another pathophysiological stimulus that induces premature senescence, an intrinsic cellular response that may mechanistically underlie the 'distended' morphology evoked by CDTs. Finally, the activation of the two anti-cancer barriers, apoptosis and cellular senescence, together with evidence of chromosomal aberrations (micronucleation) reported here, support the emerging genotoxic and potentially oncogenic effects of this group of bacterial toxins, and warrant further investigation of their role(s) in human disease.

AB - Cytolethal distending toxins (CDTs) are proteins produced and secreted by facultative pathogenic strains of Gram-negative bacteria with potentially genotoxic effects. Mammalian cells exposed to CDTs undergo cell type-dependent cell-cycle arrest or apoptosis; however the cell fate responses to such intoxication are mechanistically incompletely understood. Here we show that both normal and cancer cells (BJ, IMR-90 and WI-38 fibroblasts, HeLa and U2-OS cell lines) that survive the acute phase of intoxication by Haemophilus ducreyi CDT possess the hallmarks of cellular senescence. This characteristic phenotype included persistently activated DNA damage signaling (detected as 53BP1/gammaH2AX-positive foci), enhanced senescence-associated beta-galactosidase activity, expansion of PML nuclear compartments, and induced expression of several cytokines (especially interleukins IL-6, IL-8 and IL-24), overall features shared by cells undergoing replicative or premature cellular senescence. We conclude that analogous to oncogenic, oxidative and replicative stresses, bacterial intoxication represents another pathophysiological stimulus that induces premature senescence, an intrinsic cellular response that may mechanistically underlie the 'distended' morphology evoked by CDTs. Finally, the activation of the two anti-cancer barriers, apoptosis and cellular senescence, together with evidence of chromosomal aberrations (micronucleation) reported here, support the emerging genotoxic and potentially oncogenic effects of this group of bacterial toxins, and warrant further investigation of their role(s) in human disease.

U2 - 10.1111/j.1582-4934.2009.00862.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1582-4934.2009.00862.x

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 19650831

JO - Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine

JF - Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine

SN - 1582-1838

ER -

ID: 18697888