Intracellular signaling modules linking DNA damage to secretome changes in senescent melanoma cells

Cellular senescence is a major barricade on the path of cancer development, yet proteins secreted from senescent cells exert complex and often discordant effects on subsequent cancer evolution. Somatic genome alternations driving the formation of nevi and melanoma are efficient inducers of cellular senescence. Melanocyte and melanoma cell senescence is likely to come into play as a key factor affecting the course of tumorigenesis and responsiveness to therapy; little mechanistic information has been generated, however, that substantiates this idea and facilitates its clinical translation. Here, we established and characterized a model of melanoma cell senescence in which pharmacologically induced DNA damage triggered divergent ATM kinase- and STING-dependent intracellular signaling cascades and resulted in cell cycle arrest, cytomorphologic remodeling, and drastic secretome changes. Targeted proteome profiling revealed that senescent melanoma cells in this model secreted a panoply of proteins shaping the tumor immune microenvironment. CRISPR-mediated genetic ablation of the p38α and IKKβ signaling modules downstream of the ATM kinase severed the link between DNA damage and this secretory phenotype without restoring proliferative capacity. A similar genetic dissection showed that loss of STING signaling prevented type I interferon induction in DNA-damaged melanoma cells but otherwise left the senescence-associated processes in our model intact. Actionable proteins secreted f...
Source: Melanoma Research - Category: Cancer & Oncology Tags: Original Articles: Basic science Source Type: research