A prototypical non-malignant epithelial model to study genome dynamics and concurrently monitor micro-RNAs and proteins in situ during oncogene-induced senescence

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

  • Eirini Stavroula Komseli
  • Ioannis S. Pateras
  • Thorbjørn Krejsgaard
  • Konrad Stawiski
  • Sophia V. Rizou
  • Alexander Polyzos
  • Fani Marlen Roumelioti
  • Maria Chiourea
  • Ioanna Mourkioti
  • Eleni Paparouna
  • Christos P. Zampetidis
  • Sentiljana Gumeni
  • Ioannis P. Trougakos
  • Dafni Eleftheria Pefani
  • Eric O'Neill
  • Sarantis Gagos
  • Aristides G. Eliopoulos
  • Wojciech Fendler
  • Dipanjan Chowdhury
  • Jiri Bartek
  • And 1 others
  • Vassilis G. Gorgoulis

Background: Senescence is a fundamental biological process implicated in various pathologies, including cancer. Regarding carcinogenesis, senescence signifies, at least in its initial phases, an anti-tumor response that needs to be circumvented for cancer to progress. Micro-RNAs, a subclass of regulatory, non-coding RNAs, participate in senescence regulation. At the subcellular level micro-RNAs, similar to proteins, have been shown to traffic between organelles influencing cellular behavior. The differential function of micro-RNAs relative to their subcellular localization and their role in senescence biology raises concurrent in situ analysis of coding and non-coding gene products in senescent cells as a necessity. However, technical challenges have rendered in situ co-detection unfeasible until now. Methods: In the present report we describe a methodology that bypasses these technical limitations achieving for the first time simultaneous detection of both a micro-RNA and a protein in the biological context of cellular senescence, utilizing the new commercially available SenTraGorTM compound. The method was applied in a prototypical human non-malignant epithelial model of oncogene-induced senescence that we generated for the purposes of the study. For the characterization of this novel system, we applied a wide range of cellular and molecular techniques, as well as high-throughput analysis of the transcriptome and micro-RNAs. Results: This experimental setting has three advantages that are presented and discussed: i) it covers a "gap" in the molecular carcinogenesis field, as almost all corresponding in vitro models are fibroblast-based, even though the majority of neoplasms have epithelial origin, ii) it recapitulates the precancerous and cancerous phases of epithelial tumorigenesis within a short time frame under the light of natural selection and iii) it uses as an oncogenic signal, the replication licensing factor CDC6, implicated in both DNA replication and transcription when over-expressed, a characteristic that can be exploited to monitor RNA dynamics. Conclusions: Consequently, we demonstrate that our model is optimal for studying the molecular basis of epithelial carcinogenesis shedding light on the tumor-initiating events. The latter may reveal novel molecular targets with clinical benefit. Besides, since this method can be incorporated in a wide range of low, medium or high-throughput image-based approaches, we expect it to be broadly applicable.

Original languageEnglish
Article number37
JournalBMC Genomics
Volume19
Issue number1
Number of pages22
ISSN1471-2164
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2018

    Research areas

  • Cancer, CDC6, DNA damage response, In situ hybridization, Micro-RNAs, Oncogene-induced senescence, R loops, RDNA, Replication stress, SenTraGorTM

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