Mitochondrial DNA released by senescent tumor cells enhances PMN-MDSC-driven immunosuppression through the cGAS-STING pathway

Ping Lai(Università della Svizzera italiana), Lei Liu(Università della Svizzera italiana), Nicolò Bancaro(Università della Svizzera italiana), Martina Troiani(Università della Svizzera italiana), Bianca Calì(Università della Svizzera italiana), Yuxin Li(Università della Svizzera italiana), Jingjing Chen(Institute of Oncology Research), Prafull Kumar Singh(Università della Svizzera italiana), Rydell Alvarez Arzola(Università della Svizzera italiana), Giuseppe Attanasio(Università della Svizzera italiana), Nicolò Pernigoni(Università della Svizzera italiana), Emiliano Pasquini(Università della Svizzera italiana), Simone Mosole(Università della Svizzera italiana), Andrea Rinaldi(Università della Svizzera italiana), Jacopo Sgrignani(Università della Svizzera italiana), Shi Qiu(Sichuan University), Pan Song(Sichuan University), Yingrui Li(Università della Svizzera italiana), María Andrea Desbats(Veneto Institute of Molecular Medicine), Azucena Rendón Ángel(Swiss Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Ricardo Pereira Mestre(Ente Ospedaliero Cantonale), Andrea Cavalli(Università della Svizzera italiana), Lucio Barile(Swiss Institute for Regenerative Medicine), Johann S. de Bono(Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust), Andrea Alimonti(Ente Ospedaliero Cantonale)
Immunity
April 1, 2025
Cited by 96Open Access
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Abstract

Mitochondrial dysfunction is a hallmark of cellular senescence. Here, we investigated whether senescent cells release mitochondrial (mt)DNA into the extracellular space and its impact on innate immunity. We found that both primary senescent cells and tumor cells undergoing therapy-induced senescence actively released mtDNA into the extracellular environment. mtDNA released by senescent cells was packaged within extracellular vesicles and selectively transferred to polymorphonuclear myeloid-derived suppressor cells (PMN-MDSCs) in the tumor microenvironment. Upon uptake, extracellular mtDNA enhanced the immunosuppressive activity of PMN-MDSCs via cGAS-STING-NF-κB signaling, thereby promoting tumor progression. While STING activation directly induced NF-κB signaling, it also activated PKR-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase (PERK), which further amplified NF-κB activity, in PMN-MDSCs. mtDNA release from senescent cells was mediated by voltage-dependent anion channels (VDACs), and pharmacological inhibition of VDAC reduced extracellular mtDNA levels, reversed PMN-MDSC-driven immunosuppression, and enhanced chemotherapy efficacy in prostate cancer mouse models. These findings suggest that targeting mtDNA release could reprogram the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, improving therapeutic outcomes for chemotherapy-treated patients.


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