Mitochondrial Dysfunction Accounts for the Stochastic Heterogeneity in Telomere-Dependent Senescence

João F. Passos(Newcastle University), Gabriele Saretzki(Newcastle Hospitals - Campus for Ageing and Vitality), Shaheda Ahmed(Newcastle Hospitals - Campus for Ageing and Vitality), Glyn Nelson(Newcastle University), Torsten Richter(Newcastle Hospitals - Campus for Ageing and Vitality), Heiko Peters(Centre for Life), Ilka Wappler(Centre for Life), Matthew J. Birket(Newcastle University), Graham Harold, Karin Schaeuble(Newcastle Hospitals - Campus for Ageing and Vitality), Mark A. Birch‐Machin(Newcastle University), Thomas B. L. Kirkwood(Newcastle Hospitals - Campus for Ageing and Vitality), Thomas von Zglinicki(Newcastle Hospitals - Campus for Ageing and Vitality)
PLoS Biology
April 27, 2007
Cited by 782Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Aging is an inherently stochastic process, and its hallmark is heterogeneity between organisms, cell types, and clonal populations, even in identical environments. The replicative lifespan of primary human cells is telomere dependent; however, its heterogeneity is not understood. We show that mitochondrial superoxide production increases with replicative age in human fibroblasts despite an adaptive UCP-2-dependent mitochondrial uncoupling. This mitochondrial dysfunction is accompanied by compromised [Ca(2+)]i homeostasis and other indicators of a retrograde response in senescent cells. Replicative senescence of human fibroblasts is delayed by mild mitochondrial uncoupling. Uncoupling reduces mitochondrial superoxide generation, slows down telomere shortening, and delays formation of telomeric gamma-H2A.X foci. This indicates mitochondrial production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as one of the causes of replicative senescence. By sorting early senescent (SES) cells from young proliferating fibroblast cultures, we show that SES cells have higher ROS levels, dysfunctional mitochondria, shorter telomeres, and telomeric gamma-H2A.X foci. We propose that mitochondrial ROS is a major determinant of telomere-dependent senescence at the single-cell level that is responsible for cell-to-cell variation in replicative lifespan.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis