Protein phosphatase 2A activators reverse age‐related behavioral changes by targeting neural cell senescence

Author:

Xing Jun12,Chen Kehua12,Gao Shuaiyun12,Pousse Mélanie23,Ying Yilin123,Wang Bo12,Chen Lianxiang12,Wang Cuicui12,Wang Lei1,Hu Weiguo1,Lu Yiming12,Gilson Eric234ORCID,Ye Jing12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Geriatric Department, Geriatric Medical Center, Shanghai Ruijin Hospital Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine Shanghai China

2. International Laboratory in Cancer, Aging and Hematology Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine/Ruijin Hospital/CNRS/Inserm/Côte d'Azur University Shanghai China

3. IRCAN Côte d'Azur University, CNRS, Inserm Nice France

4. Department of Genetics CHU Nice France

Abstract

AbstractThe contribution of cellular senescence to the behavioral changes observed in the elderly remains elusive. Here, we observed that aging is associated with a decline in protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) activity in the brains of zebrafish and mice. Moreover, drugs activating PP2A reversed age‐related behavioral changes. We developed a transgenic zebrafish model to decrease PP2A activity in the brain through knockout of the ppp2r2c gene encoding a regulatory subunit of PP2A. Mutant fish exhibited the behavioral phenotype observed in old animals and premature accumulation of neural cells positive for markers of cellular senescence, including senescence‐associated β‐galactosidase, elevated levels cdkn2a/b, cdkn1a, senescence‐associated secretory phenotype gene expression, and an increased level of DNA damage signaling. The behavioral and cell senescence phenotypes were reversed in mutant fish through treatment with the senolytic ABT263 or diverse PP2A activators as well as through cdkn1a or tp53 gene ablation. Senomorphic function of PP2A activators was demonstrated in mouse primary neural cells with downregulated Ppp2r2c. We conclude that PP2A reduction leads to neural cell senescence thereby contributing to age‐related behavioral changes and that PP2A activators have senotherapeutic properties against deleterious behavioral effects of brain aging.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Aging

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