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Senescence-associated lineage-aberrant plasticity evokes T-cell-mediated tumor control

Authors

  • D. Belenki
  • P. Richter-Pechanska
  • Z. Shao
  • A. Bhattacharya
  • A. Lau
  • J.A.N.L.F. de Freitas
  • G. Kandler
  • T.P. Hick
  • X. Cai
  • Eva Scharnagl
  • A. Bittner
  • M. Schönlein
  • J. Kase
  • K. Pardon
  • B. Brzezicha
  • N. Thiessen
  • O. Bischof
  • J.R. Dörr
  • M. Reimann
  • M. Milanovic
  • J. Du
  • Y. Yu
  • B. Chapuy
  • S. Lee
  • U. Leser
  • C. Scheidereit
  • J. Wolf
  • D.N.Y. Fan
  • C.A. Schmitt

Journal

  • Nature Communications

Citation

  • Nat Commun 16 (1): 3079

Abstract

  • Cellular senescence is a stress-inducible state switch relevant in aging, tumorigenesis and cancer therapy. Beyond a lasting arrest, senescent cells are characterized by profound chromatin remodeling and transcriptional reprogramming. We show here myeloid-skewed aberrant lineage plasticity and its immunological ramifications in therapy-induced senescence (TIS) of primary human and murine B-cell lymphoma. We find myeloid transcription factor (TF) networks, specifically AP-1-, C/EBPβ- and PU.1-governed transcriptional programs, enriched in TIS but not in equally chemotherapy-exposed senescence-incapable cancer cells. Dependent on these master TF, TIS lymphoma cells adopt a lineage-promiscuous state with properties of monocytic-dendritic cell (DC) differentiation. TIS lymphoma cells are preferentially lysed by T-cells in vitro, and mice harboring DC-skewed Eμ-myc lymphoma experience significantly longer tumor-free survival. Consistently, superior long-term outcome is also achieved in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma patients with high expression of a TIS-related DC signature. In essence, these data demonstrate a therapeutically exploitable, prognostically favorable immunogenic role of senescence-dependent aberrant myeloid plasticity in B-cell lymphoma.


DOI

doi:10.1038/s41467-025-57429-x