
Proteostasis failure and cellular senescence in long‐term cultured postmitotic rat neurons
Author(s) -
Ishikawa Shoma,
Ishikawa Fuyuki
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
aging cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.103
H-Index - 140
eISSN - 1474-9726
pISSN - 1474-9718
DOI - 10.1111/acel.13071
Subject(s) - proteostasis , senescence , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , cellular model , aging brain , dna damage , neuroprotection , autophagy , neuroscience , cell culture , genetics , apoptosis , cognition , dna
Cellular senescence, a stress‐induced irreversible cell cycle arrest, has been defined for mitotic cells and is implicated in aging of replicative tissues. Age‐related functional decline in the brain is often attributed to a failure of protein homeostasis (proteostasis), largely in postmitotic neurons, which accordingly is a process distinct by definition from senescence. It is nevertheless possible that proteostasis failure and cellular senescence have overlapping molecular mechanisms. Here, we identify postmitotic cellular senescence as an adaptive stress response to proteostasis failure. Primary rat hippocampal neurons in long‐term cultures show molecular changes indicative of both senescence (senescence‐associated β‐galactosidase, p16, and loss of lamin B1) and proteostasis failure relevant to Alzheimer's disease. In addition, we demonstrate that the senescent neurons exhibit resistance to stress. Importantly, treatment of the cultures with an mTOR antagonist, protein synthesis inhibitor, or chemical compound that reduces the amount of protein aggregates relieved the proteotoxic stresses as well as the appearance of senescence markers. Our data propose mechanistic insights into the pathophysiological brain aging by establishing senescence as a primary cell‐autonomous neuroprotective response.