Decoding of translation‐regulating entities reveals heterogeneous translation deficiency patterns in cellular senescence

Author:

Papaspyropoulos Angelos12,Hazapis Orsalia1,Altulea Abdullah3,Polyzou Aikaterini1,Verginis Panayotis4,Evangelou Konstantinos1,Fousteri Maria5,Papantonis Argyris67,Demaria Marco3ORCID,Gorgoulis Vassilis128910ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Carcinogenesis Group, Department of Histology and Embryology, School of Medicine National Kapodistrian University of Athens (NKUA) Athens Greece

2. Biomedical Research Foundation Academy of Athens Athens Greece

3. European Research Institute for the Biology of Ageing (ERIBA) University Medical Center Groningen Groningen The Netherlands

4. Medical School University of Crete Heraklion Greece

5. Institute for Fundamental Biomedical Research Biomedical Sciences Research Center “Alexander Fleming” Vari Greece

6. Institute of Pathology University Medical Center Göttingen Göttingen Germany

7. Center for Molecular Medicine Cologne University of Cologne Cologne Germany

8. Clinical Molecular Pathology Medical School, University of Dundee Dundee UK

9. Molecular and Clinical Cancer Sciences, Manchester Cancer Research Centre, Manchester Academic Health Sciences Centre University of Manchester Manchester UK

10. Center for New Biotechnologies and Precision Medicine Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Athens Greece

Abstract

AbstractCellular senescence constitutes a generally irreversible proliferation barrier, accompanied by macromolecular damage and metabolic rewiring. Several senescence types have been identified based on the initiating stimulus, such as replicative (RS), stress‐induced (SIS) and oncogene‐induced senescence (OIS). These senescence subtypes are heterogeneous and often develop subset‐specific phenotypes. Reduced protein synthesis is considered a senescence hallmark, but whether this trait pertains to various senescence subtypes and if distinct molecular mechanisms are involved remain largely unknown. Here, we analyze large published or experimentally produced RNA‐seq and Ribo‐seq datasets to determine whether major translation‐regulating entities such as ribosome stalling, the presence of uORFs/dORFs and IRES elements may differentially contribute to translation deficiency in senescence subsets. We show that translation‐regulating mechanisms may not be directly relevant to RS, however uORFs are significantly enriched in SIS. Interestingly, ribosome stalling, uORF/dORF patterns and IRES elements comprise predominant mechanisms upon OIS, strongly correlating with Notch pathway activation. Our study provides for the first time evidence that major translation dysregulation mechanisms/patterns occur during cellular senescence, but at different rates depending on the stimulus type. The degree at which those mechanisms accumulate directly correlates with translation deficiency levels. Our thorough analysis contributes to elucidating crucial and so far unknown differences in the translation machinery between senescence subsets.

Funder

Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation

KWF Kankerbestrijding

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Aging

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