Analysis of the senescence‐associated cell surfaceome reveals potential senotherapeutic targets

Author:

Deng Yushuang1,Liu Ting1,Scifo Enzo1,Li Tao2,Xie Kan1,Taschler Bernd3,Morsy Sarah14,Schaaf Kristina1,Ehninger Armin4,Bano Daniele5,Ehninger Dan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Translational Biogerontology Lab German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) Bonn Germany

2. Department of Neurodegenerative Disease and Geriatric Psychiatry/Neurology University of Bonn Medical Center Bonn Germany

3. Big Data Institute University of Oxford Oxford UK

4. AvenCell Europe GmbH Dresden Germany

5. Aging and Neurodegeneration Lab German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) Bonn Germany

Abstract

AbstractThe accumulation of senescent cells is thought to play a crucial role in aging‐associated physiological decline and the pathogenesis of various age‐related pathologies. Targeting senescence‐associated cell surface molecules through immunotherapy emerges as a promising avenue for the selective removal of these cells. Despite its potential, a thorough characterization of senescence‐specific surface proteins remains to be achieved. Our study addresses this gap by conducting an extensive analysis of the cell surface proteome, or “surfaceome”, in senescent cells, spanning various senescence induction regimes and encompassing both murine and human cell types. Utilizing quantitative mass spectrometry, we investigated enriched cell surface proteins across eight distinct models of senescence. Our results uncover significant changes in surfaceome expression profiles during senescence, highlighting extensive modifications in cell mechanics and extracellular matrix remodeling. Our research also reveals substantive heterogeneity of senescence, predominantly influenced by cell type and senescence inducer. A key discovery of our study is the identification of four unique cell surface proteins with extracellular epitopes. These proteins are expressed in senescent cells, absent or present at low levels in their proliferating counterparts, and notably upregulated in tissues from aged mice and an Alzheimer's disease mouse model. These proteins stand out as promising candidates for senotherapeutic targeting, offering potential pathways for the detection and strategic targeting of senescent cell populations in aging and age‐related diseases.

Funder

China Scholarship Council

Publisher

Wiley

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